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April, 2005
By Josephine Louie
Racial discrimination is an ongoing reality in the
lives of African Americans and Hispanics in Metro Boston. Although
the region has experienced significant growth in racial and ethnic
diversity over the past several decades, racial minority groups
continue to struggle for full acceptance and equal opportunity.
African Americans and Hispanics report persistent discrimination
in the workplace, in seeking housing, and in their day-to-day encounters
with other metro area residents. Large shares of African Americans
and Hispanics say they feel unwelcome in marketplaces and residential
communities throughout the region. Substantial shares believe that
racial discrimination in Metro Boston is a serious problem.
| The Metropolitan
Boston Equity Initiative is a yearlong effort investigating
racial change and the implications of such change for social
and economic opportunity within the region’s diverse population.
More in-depth research can be found at MBE's
web site. |
These sentiments arise within a region whose majority population
may believe that racial discrimination is no longer a serious issue.
In the mid-1970s, the city of Boston erupted in racial violence
over the desegregation of its public schools. Since those turbulent
times, thousands of racial and ethnic minorities have settled in
the city and region. Growing diversity and the passage of time may
have led to a sense among some area residents that the city of Boston’s
racial divisiveness is a relic of the past, and that the area’s
wells of racial intolerance have subsided.
Although racial strife is nowhere near the levels of the 1970s,
racial intolerance and racial inequality have not fully subsided.
Instead, they have taken new forms and have moved across the region.
As greater numbers of racial minorities have come to reside in the
region’s central and satellite cities, Whites have continued
their decades-long migration to the farthest reaches of the outer
suburbs. Metro Boston today is thus a deeply segregated region,
and such segregation has had the effect of isolating many racial
minorities in neighborhoods of concentrated poverty and severe social
and economic distress.
Within this context of significant racial inequality, perceptions
of racial discrimination among the region’s most disadvantaged
groups—African Americans and Hispanics—remain very high.
This finding emerges from a poll of over 400 African American and
Hispanic adults in Metro Boston. Our major findings:
- Eighty percent of African Americans and half of Hispanics
in our poll say that racial discrimination in Metro Boston is
a somewhat or very serious problem.
- Extremely high shares of minorities—especially
African Americans—believe that fear of resident antipathy
prevents members of their group from moving into communities around
the region. Almost 70 percent of Hispanics and an overwhelming
85 percent of African Americans believe that members of their
group miss out on good housing because they fear they will not
be welcome in a particular community.
- Racial discrimination in ordinary, day-to-day encounters
is a pervasive feature in the lives of African Americans and Hispanics
in Metro Boston. Over half of African Americans and almost four
out of ten Hispanics say they are treated with less respect, offered
worse service, called names or insulted, or confronted with another
form of day-to-day discrimination at least a few times a month.
- Among respondents in our poll who have attended a professional
sports venue or museum in Metro Boston, a third and a fifth (respectively)
say they have at least occasionally felt out of place or unwelcome
in each setting because of their race. Even more troubling, close
to half of African Americans and a third of Hispanics say they
have felt unwelcome in Metro Boston shopping areas and restaurants.
- Minorities of higher socioeconomic status are equally
as likely, and in some cases more likely, than their lower status
counterparts to say they have experienced different forms of racial
discrimination in Metro Boston.
- Women in our sample are more likely to perceive that
major forms of discrimination are a problem in the region, while
men are more likely to report personal experiences with some forms
of day-to-day discrimination.
- African Americans and Hispanics in Metro Boston report
personal discrimination in employment more often than in housing.
One out of four total respondents say they have been denied a
job because of their race or ethnicity in the past ten years,
and one in five say they have experienced racial discrimination
during their last year at work. In contrast, one out of eight
say they had a personal experience of discrimination the last
time they looked for housing in Metro Boston.
- Two out of three total respondents believe that discrimination
by White owners and realtors continues to hinder African Americans’
and Hispanics’ access to good housing, although lower shares
believe they have experienced housing discrimination themselves.
- More than three out of four respondents believe that
the lack of affordable housing in the region hinders African Americans’
and Hispanics’ access to good housing. Respondents thus
cite affordability more often than discrimination as a barrier
to good housing in Metro Boston.
- A vast majority—over eighty percent—of
African Americans and Hispanics in Metro Boston believe that more
should be done to integrate the region’s schools. Support
for this position is especially strong among respondents who are
young, male, never married, and with lower incomes.
High levels of perceived discrimination among minority groups have
serious implications for the region. Perceptions of discrimination
and sentiments of fear—even if inaccurate—are real forces
that affect where people choose to live and conduct their daily
lives. Perceptions of racial discrimination can affect the decisions
of talented minorities within the region to stay or to leave; perceptions
can also travel and affect the decisions of minorities outside the
region to settle in the area. Such decisions have important social
and economic consequences for a state that is currently losing population.
Research evidence also suggests that perceptions of discrimination
lead to higher levels of psychological stress and negative emotional
outcomes. Beliefs among minority groups that racial discrimination
is a persistent phenomenon can therefore add to the public health
costs of the region. In addition, social trust and positive civic
interactions among majority and minority communities are likely
to diminish when large numbers of minorities believe that they cannot
gain full social acceptance or access to a full range of economic
opportunities, even if they work hard and achieve middle class status.
Inter-group tensions only worsen when Whites do not recognize the
serious social and economic barriers that minority groups face,
and when they do little to remedy the broader social conditions
and specific behaviors that underlie minorities’ claims of
unequal treatment.
To lower perceptions of discrimination within the region, community
leaders and individual citizens must make concerted efforts to understand
the actions and behaviors within the majority community that fuel
minorities’ perceptions, and to end ongoing patterns of discrimination.
They must take significant steps to end the racial isolation that
underlies interracial ignorance, misunderstanding, and fear. Policy
measures the region should take include rigorous enforcement of
anti-discrimination laws in employment and housing; increased recruitment
of racial minorities in all segments of the workforce; and renewed
commitment to increasing affordable housing and minority access
to housing across the entire region. Educators and civic leaders
should maintain efforts within public schools to help young people
of diverse backgrounds come together to learn to understand each
other and function harmoniously within a shared community. There
should be sustained efforts through community and faith-based organizations
to promote inter-group conversation and interracial acceptance.
Finally, researchers and journalists have an ongoing responsibility
to report on the deep racial inequalities that exist in the region,
and to help the public understand and discuss the broader social
contexts that contribute to these inequalities. As the region continues
to grow more racially and ethnically diverse, and as the White population
continues to shrink, the future social, economic, and civic health
of the region depend on the ability of all the people in Metro Boston
to live and work alongside each other with interracial understanding
and trust. Within a rapidly changing Metro Boston population, ignorance
of persistent minority disadvantage across the region and passive
acceptance of its multiple social causes may only heighten racial
polarization.
To view
the COMPLETE REPORT and study conducted
by The Civil Rights Project go to:
We Don't Feel Welcome Here:
African Americans and Hispanics in Metro Boston (in PDF Format)
To view the Appendixes to the report go to:
Appendix
Issue
Summary (in PDF Format)
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