Following Hurricane Katrina, many people were shocked by the extent of racial segregation in the New Orleans housing market. And yet, New Orleans is far from an isolated case. Forty years after passage of the Fair Housing Act, racially segregated neighborhoods are all too common in the United States. The reasons usually offered for this continued segregation include discrimination in the real estate and housing markets. Recently, these reasons have been challenged by a theory claiming that segregation exists because African Americans prefer to live together for positive reasons, such as to share and support a common heritage. In “Do African Americans Prefer to Live in Segregated Communities,?” Bob DeFina examines the evidence and notes that...
While many scholars have demonstrated that entrenched racial residential segregation perpetuates rac...
This block level analysis raises serious questions about the white-black housing dissimilarity segre...
Despite the decline in group inequality and the rapid expansion of the black middle class in the Uni...
For many decades, it hasbeen argued that the u.s. remains racially segregated because of discriminat...
When blacks and whites reacted so differently to the verdict of the O.J. Simpson trial, many observe...
Debates about the causes of segregation continue to consider the role that own-race preferences have...
Despite the decline in group inequality and the rapid expansion of the black middle class in the Uni...
Despite the success of the Civil Rights movement in mostly eliminating official segregation in the 1...
A new sociological phenomenon exists: middle class African Americans are moving to suburban areas an...
This paper hypothesizes that segregation in US cities increases as racial inequality narrows due to ...
A new study on the housing search process adds to a growing body of research questioning the myth th...
Neighborhood racial composition preferences have the potential to produce extreme residential segreg...
This paper sets out a new mechanism, involving the emergence of middle-class black neighborhoods, th...
Why are the black brownstone owners in Harlem and Brooklyn disproportionately West Indian? The landl...
While there is consensus that African-Americans are overrepresented in the homeless population, ther...
While many scholars have demonstrated that entrenched racial residential segregation perpetuates rac...
This block level analysis raises serious questions about the white-black housing dissimilarity segre...
Despite the decline in group inequality and the rapid expansion of the black middle class in the Uni...
For many decades, it hasbeen argued that the u.s. remains racially segregated because of discriminat...
When blacks and whites reacted so differently to the verdict of the O.J. Simpson trial, many observe...
Debates about the causes of segregation continue to consider the role that own-race preferences have...
Despite the decline in group inequality and the rapid expansion of the black middle class in the Uni...
Despite the success of the Civil Rights movement in mostly eliminating official segregation in the 1...
A new sociological phenomenon exists: middle class African Americans are moving to suburban areas an...
This paper hypothesizes that segregation in US cities increases as racial inequality narrows due to ...
A new study on the housing search process adds to a growing body of research questioning the myth th...
Neighborhood racial composition preferences have the potential to produce extreme residential segreg...
This paper sets out a new mechanism, involving the emergence of middle-class black neighborhoods, th...
Why are the black brownstone owners in Harlem and Brooklyn disproportionately West Indian? The landl...
While there is consensus that African-Americans are overrepresented in the homeless population, ther...
While many scholars have demonstrated that entrenched racial residential segregation perpetuates rac...
This block level analysis raises serious questions about the white-black housing dissimilarity segre...
Despite the decline in group inequality and the rapid expansion of the black middle class in the Uni...