Neighborhoods are critical contexts for children’s well-being, but differences in neighborhood inequality among children and adults are understudied. I document racial segregation between neighborhoods among school-age children and adults in 2000 and 2010 and find that though the racial composition of children’s and adults’ neighborhoods is similar, exposure to own-age neighbors varies. Compared with adults’ exposure to other adults, children are exposed to fewer white and more minority, particularly Hispanic, children. This is due in part to compositional differences, but children are also more unevenly sorted across neighborhoods by race than adults. One explanation for higher segregation among children is that parents consider school opt...
This study investigates if neighbourhoods can alter the strong relationship between parental backgro...
Standard intuition suggests that residential segregation in the United States will decline when raci...
Prior research has shown that children’s residence in high poverty neighborhoods increases their ris...
Over the past few decades, school choice has been a widely debated issue around the globe, following...
Racial/ethnic segregation, a prominent feature in most major city school systems, has more recently ...
Prior research has shown that neighbourhood racial and income contexts remain simi-lar across genera...
Whites, blacks and Latinos in the United States tend to live in diff erent neighborhoods and attend ...
Standard intuition suggests that residential segregation in the United States should decline when ra...
This paper sets out a new mechanism, involving the emergence of middle-class black neighborhoods, th...
The authors wish to acknowledge Demetra Kalogrides and Lindsay Fox for providing excellent research ...
‘School segregation’ indicates the concentration of a minority into a school that significantly exc...
Excess school segregation is a phenomena observed across many countries and one common explanation f...
Youth obesity prevalence remains high, despite decades of intervention. Grounded in the social ecolo...
Those who traditionally attend racially similar schools tend to seek out a similar environment for t...
Excess school segregation is a phenomena observed across many countries and one common explanation f...
This study investigates if neighbourhoods can alter the strong relationship between parental backgro...
Standard intuition suggests that residential segregation in the United States will decline when raci...
Prior research has shown that children’s residence in high poverty neighborhoods increases their ris...
Over the past few decades, school choice has been a widely debated issue around the globe, following...
Racial/ethnic segregation, a prominent feature in most major city school systems, has more recently ...
Prior research has shown that neighbourhood racial and income contexts remain simi-lar across genera...
Whites, blacks and Latinos in the United States tend to live in diff erent neighborhoods and attend ...
Standard intuition suggests that residential segregation in the United States should decline when ra...
This paper sets out a new mechanism, involving the emergence of middle-class black neighborhoods, th...
The authors wish to acknowledge Demetra Kalogrides and Lindsay Fox for providing excellent research ...
‘School segregation’ indicates the concentration of a minority into a school that significantly exc...
Excess school segregation is a phenomena observed across many countries and one common explanation f...
Youth obesity prevalence remains high, despite decades of intervention. Grounded in the social ecolo...
Those who traditionally attend racially similar schools tend to seek out a similar environment for t...
Excess school segregation is a phenomena observed across many countries and one common explanation f...
This study investigates if neighbourhoods can alter the strong relationship between parental backgro...
Standard intuition suggests that residential segregation in the United States will decline when raci...
Prior research has shown that children’s residence in high poverty neighborhoods increases their ris...