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January 12, 2006
By Gary
Orfield and Chungmei Lee
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When Martin Luther King made his first speech at the
Lincoln memorial in 1957 three years after the Brown decision, desegregation
was about a battle to give black students access to schools previously
established for whites only, mostly in the seventeen states that
had practiced segregation by state law. King called for action to
enforce the desegregation decision. The nation’s schools were
overwhelmingly white, and when King marched against segregation
eight years later in Chicago in 1965, it was still about a black-white
conflict. Forty years later, however, the nation’s schools
have changed almost beyond recognition; the white majority is continuously
shrinking, and the segregation has taken on a multiracial character.
Unfortunately, though generations of students have been born and
graduated, segregation is not gone. In fact, in communities that
were desegregated in the Southern and Border regions, segregation
is increasing; and in regions that were never substantially desegregated,
including many metropolitan areas in the Northeast, Midwest, and
West, segregation is growing in degree and complexity as the nation
becomes increasingly multiracial. The resegregation of blacks is
greatest in the Southern and Border states and appears to be clearly
related to the Supreme Court decisions in the l990s permitting return
to segregated neighborhood schools. These changes, and the continuing
strong relationship between segregation and many forms of educational
inequality, compound the already existing disadvantage of historically
excluded groups. The rapid growth of these excluded populations
in conditions of intensifying segregation make urgent the development
of plans and policies to transform diversity into an asset for all
children and society, rather than continuing to separate children
in a way that harms both those excluded from better schools and
white students in those schools who are not being prepared for success
in multiracial communities and workplaces of the future.
School segregation is often perceived as an old and
obsolete issue. Reactions include claims that it was solved long
ago, that, on the contrary, experience shows it cannot be solved,
or that we have learned to make separate schools genuinely equal.
None of these perceptions is true. Past research showed that, after
a period of desegregation in the late 1960s, black students became
increasingly resegregated in the South and Border states. Latino
students, who have been excluded from serious desegregation efforts,
are becoming even more segregated than black students in Southern
and Western regions. Yet, despite recent trends in resegregation,
the South and Border states remain among the least segregated for
black students, suggesting that desegregation orders in the past
have been effective, and that segregation is not an intractable
issue. Further, the strong relationship between poverty, race and
educational achievement and graduation rates shows that, but for
a few exceptional cases under extraordinary circumstances, schools
that are separate are still unquestionably unequal. Segregation
is an old issue but one that is deeply rooted and difficult to resolve
and extremely dangerous to ignore.
This report is about the changing patterns of segregation in American
public schools through the 2003-2004 school year. We begin by examining
the transformation of racial composition in the nation’s schools,
the dynamic patterns of segregation and desegregation of all racial
groups in regions, states, and districts by using data from 1968
until 2003-4. We examine both the changes over the last decade (1991-2003)
as well as those over a much longer period (1954-2003). Data from
this report are computed from the Common Core of Data of the National
Center for Education Statistics of the U.S. Department of Education
for the years 1988, 1991, and 2003. Where data for a given year
is missing, such as the racial statistics from Georgia and Virginia
for 1991, it is noted in the tables and the nearest year is substituted
and noted. We then explore the relationship between racial and economic
segregation, document the growing presence of multiracial schools,
as well as discuss the implications of the lifting of desegregation
orders on districts and the possible policy alternatives. The report
ends with a brief discussion of what could be done to increase integration
in schools.
To view the COMPLETE REPORT
and study conducted by The Civil Rights Project go to:
Racial Transformation
and the Changing Nature of Segregation (in PDF Format)

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