Throughout history cities have contained separate areas where ethnic groups are concentrated. In the U.S. many older cities in the Northeast and Midwest contain large African-American ghettos. We discuss the causes and consequences of ethnic and racial segregation. We identify differences between voluntary and involuntary ghettos and we understand them using agglomeration economies, positive and negative externalities, bid rent theory, land and labor markets. We show that sharply segregated urban land use patterns can be socially efficient or inefficient depending on the nature of preferences and the externalities. Exclusionary policies often capture the economic efficiency. We observe a bewildering variety of political and public policy re...
In contrast with the evolving racial segregation in the US and Europe over the centuries, the latest...
This paper examines the patterns of residential mobility by whites and African Americans that contri...
The urban fringe—the portion of metropolitan and micropolitan areas located outside of cities—is hom...
Creating inclusive cities requires meaningful responses to inequality and segregation. We build an a...
American cities are diverse, with people from various ethnic backgrounds calling the city their home...
This paper sets out a new mechanism, involving the emergence of middle-class black neighborhoods, th...
Summary. As an introduction to this special issue on ethnic segregation in cities, we offer the read...
American cities are diverse, with people from various ethnic backgrounds calling the city their home...
The quality of life that people experience in the United States depends largely on the neighborhood ...
Racial residential segregation is interconnected with several other phenomena such as income inequal...
Despite the decline in group inequality and the rapid expansion of the black middle class in the Uni...
Creating inclusive cities requires meaningful responses to inequality and segregation. We build an a...
Residential landscapes throughout the urban United States have long been associated with high levels...
The final chapter of the volume outlines broader observations and outcomes that are likely to feed f...
This paper hypothesizes that segregation in US cities increases as racial inequality narrows due to ...
In contrast with the evolving racial segregation in the US and Europe over the centuries, the latest...
This paper examines the patterns of residential mobility by whites and African Americans that contri...
The urban fringe—the portion of metropolitan and micropolitan areas located outside of cities—is hom...
Creating inclusive cities requires meaningful responses to inequality and segregation. We build an a...
American cities are diverse, with people from various ethnic backgrounds calling the city their home...
This paper sets out a new mechanism, involving the emergence of middle-class black neighborhoods, th...
Summary. As an introduction to this special issue on ethnic segregation in cities, we offer the read...
American cities are diverse, with people from various ethnic backgrounds calling the city their home...
The quality of life that people experience in the United States depends largely on the neighborhood ...
Racial residential segregation is interconnected with several other phenomena such as income inequal...
Despite the decline in group inequality and the rapid expansion of the black middle class in the Uni...
Creating inclusive cities requires meaningful responses to inequality and segregation. We build an a...
Residential landscapes throughout the urban United States have long been associated with high levels...
The final chapter of the volume outlines broader observations and outcomes that are likely to feed f...
This paper hypothesizes that segregation in US cities increases as racial inequality narrows due to ...
In contrast with the evolving racial segregation in the US and Europe over the centuries, the latest...
This paper examines the patterns of residential mobility by whites and African Americans that contri...
The urban fringe—the portion of metropolitan and micropolitan areas located outside of cities—is hom...