Literature DB >> 31787784

LINKING RACIAL COMPOSITION, BLACK-WHITE INEQUALITY, AND REGIONAL DIFFERENCE: THE ROLE OF MIGRATION.

Heather A O'Connell1.   

Abstract

The percent black-inequality relationship and the unique position of the South have been cornerstones of research on US racial inequality. Using an innovative methodological approach, I address how migration contributes to our understanding of the percent black-inequality relationship. I find that the educationally selective migration of blacks and whites significantly contributes to the percent black-inequality relationship via compositional changes. However, any explanatory power is limited to the non-South. Migration plays a role in understanding this relationship, yet processes related to black population concentration still generate black disadvantage anew, particularly within the South.

Entities:  

Keywords:  migration; percent black; racial inequality; racial threat; region; spatial processes

Year:  2017        PMID: 31787784      PMCID: PMC6884143          DOI: 10.1080/00380253.2017.1383140

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sociol Q        ISSN: 0038-0253


  9 in total

1.  HISTORICAL RACIAL CONTEXTS AND CONTEMPORARY SPATIAL DIFFERENCES IN RACIAL INEQUALITY.

Authors:  Katherine J Curtis; Heather A O'Connell
Journal:  Spat Demogr       Date:  2016-04-08

2.  Poor people on the move: county-to-county migration and the spatial concentration of poverty.

Authors:  M Nord
Journal:  J Reg Sci       Date:  1998-05

3.  Neighborhood selection and the social reproduction of concentrated racial inequality.

Authors:  Robert J Sampson; Patrick Sharkey
Journal:  Demography       Date:  2008-02

4.  The spatial dynamics of stratification: metropolitan context, population redistribution, and black and Hispanic homeownership.

Authors:  Chenoa A Flippen
Journal:  Demography       Date:  2010-11

5.  The changing impact of white migration on the population compositions of origin and destination metropolitan areas.

Authors:  W H Frey
Journal:  Demography       Date:  1979-05

6.  Effects of migration on the educational levels of the black resident population at the origin and destination, 1955--1960 and 1965--1970.

Authors:  E H Shin
Journal:  Demography       Date:  1978-02

7.  Neighborhood Foreclosures, Racial/Ethnic Transitions, and Residential Segregation.

Authors:  Matthew Hall; Kyle Crowder; Amy Spring
Journal:  Am Sociol Rev       Date:  2015-06

8.  Race, gender, and marriage: destination selection during the Great Migration.

Authors:  Katherine J Curtis White; Kyle Crowder; Stewart E Tolnay; Robert M Adelman
Journal:  Demography       Date:  2005-05

9.  U.S. Return Migration and the Decline in Southern Black Disadvantage, 1970-2000.

Authors:  Katherine J Curtis
Journal:  Soc Sci Q       Date:  2018-03-05
  9 in total

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