The ongoing segregation of Blacks who live in many of America’s cities has not only economic, but political consequences as well. In new research, Jessica Trounstine finds that not only are the most segregated cities more likely to see racially polarized voting, they also spend less on services for their residents. She writes that her results mean that compared to whites, nonwhites are much more likely to live in communities that are unable to provide adequate public services for their residents
The quality of life that people experience in the United States depends largely on the neighborhood ...
Public goods in the United States are largely funded and delivered at the local level. Local public ...
Since the 1980s, the American federal government has devolved a wide array of crucial policy decisio...
Many United States cities function without regular problems. They have well-kept roads, sewers that...
Despite the decline in group inequality and the rapid expansion of the black middle class in the Uni...
This paper hypothesizes that segregation in US cities increases as racial inequality narrows due to ...
This paper sets out a new mechanism, involving the emergence of middle-class black neighborhoods, th...
Standard intuition suggests that residential segregation in the United States should decline when ra...
Racial segregation in American cities is no accident. Building on research from her award-winning bo...
Changes in the patterns of income and residential segregation were examined in the Portland Metropol...
Read complete article Most residents consider the city they live in a civic space, somewhere they ca...
Standard intuition suggests that when racial socioeconomic inequality declines, so residential segre...
Standard intuition suggests that residential segregation in the United States will decline when raci...
Despite the decline in group inequality and the rapid expansion of the black middle class in the Uni...
Public goods in the United States are largely funded and delivered at the local level. Local public ...
The quality of life that people experience in the United States depends largely on the neighborhood ...
Public goods in the United States are largely funded and delivered at the local level. Local public ...
Since the 1980s, the American federal government has devolved a wide array of crucial policy decisio...
Many United States cities function without regular problems. They have well-kept roads, sewers that...
Despite the decline in group inequality and the rapid expansion of the black middle class in the Uni...
This paper hypothesizes that segregation in US cities increases as racial inequality narrows due to ...
This paper sets out a new mechanism, involving the emergence of middle-class black neighborhoods, th...
Standard intuition suggests that residential segregation in the United States should decline when ra...
Racial segregation in American cities is no accident. Building on research from her award-winning bo...
Changes in the patterns of income and residential segregation were examined in the Portland Metropol...
Read complete article Most residents consider the city they live in a civic space, somewhere they ca...
Standard intuition suggests that when racial socioeconomic inequality declines, so residential segre...
Standard intuition suggests that residential segregation in the United States will decline when raci...
Despite the decline in group inequality and the rapid expansion of the black middle class in the Uni...
Public goods in the United States are largely funded and delivered at the local level. Local public ...
The quality of life that people experience in the United States depends largely on the neighborhood ...
Public goods in the United States are largely funded and delivered at the local level. Local public ...
Since the 1980s, the American federal government has devolved a wide array of crucial policy decisio...