Literature DB >> 8980078

Prismatic Metropolis: Race and Residential Segregation in the City of the Angels

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Abstract

Most major urban areas remain segregated by race, especially in terms of black segregation from whites. We replicate and extend the innovative approach developed by Farley and colleagues for understanding processes of racial residential segregation with data collected in Los Angeles. Using a large (N = 4025) multiracial sample of adults, we examine (1) actual and perceived differences in economic status, (2) mutual preference for same race neighbors, and (3) racial prejudice and discrimination as hypotheses for the persistence of residential segregation. With a systematic experimental design we gauge respondent openness to living in areas with varying proportions of black, white, Latino, or Asian neighbors. We find no support for actual or perceived cost of housing as a barrier to integration. Although all groups exhibit some degree of ethnocentric preference for same race neighbors, this tendency is strongest among whites rather than blacks and plays only a small role in perpetuating segregation. Blacks face the greatest hostility in the search for housing and are consensually recognized as most likely to face discrimination in the housing market. Racial minorities are more open to sharing residential space with whites than with other minorities. We find generally higher rates of openness to integration than Farley and colleagues found in their recent Detroit survey.

Entities:  

Year:  1996        PMID: 8980078     DOI: 10.1006/ssre.1996.0016

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Sci Res        ISSN: 0049-089X


  13 in total

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6.  Do neighborhood economic characteristics, racial composition, and residential stability predict perceptions of stress associated with the physical and social environment? Findings from a multilevel analysis in Detroit.

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7.  The residential segregation of mixed-nativity married couples.

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8.  Residential segregation, geographic proximity and type of services used: evidence for racial/ethnic disparities in mental health.

Authors:  Gniesha Y Dinwiddie; Darrell J Gaskin; Kitty S Chan; Janette Norrington; Rachel McCleary
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9.  The determinants of neighborhood satisfaction: racial proxy revisited.

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10.  Socioeconomic Segregation of Activity Spaces in Urban Neighborhoods: Does Shared Residence Mean Shared Routines?

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