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May 29, 2002
4 Housing Studies in 3 Metropolitan
Areas:
Boston, Chicago, and San Diego
Professor Gary Orfield, Director of The Civil Rights
Project (CRP) announced a collaboration between CRP, the John
F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University, CommUNITY
2000, and The
Leadership Council for Metropolitan Open Communities, to
produce 4 ground breaking housing studies on 3 significant metropolitan
areas: Boston, Chicago, and San Diego. These studies examine the
changing racial landscape as evidenced in the 2000 Census data.
A small number of communities are becoming increasingly
white as gentrification is occurring and some multi-racial communities
are developing. Within a rapidly changing metropolitan community,
there are new possibilities and new risks. Communities need to address
concerns about equity and access to adequate housing, transportation
and employment opportunities, and to coordinate regionally to begin
to deal effectively with a more complex metropolitan space.
Guy Stuart, a leading housing expert from the John
F. Kennedy School of Government, sees serious consequences for school-age
children: "The people most damaged by this dynamic are children
who are separated from their peers of different races and ethnicities
by school district boundaries and whose educational experience is
stunted and narrowed as a result."
is an important
case, not only as the dominant urban center of New England, but
also because it has one of the largest white populations of any
major metropolitan area in the United States. It is the third largest
urban white population behind Pittsburgh and Minneapolis. And it
is one of the places where it would be the easiest to integrate
a relatively small minority population in which Latinos are the
largest group. Boston's minority population itself is very diverse
with Latinos, Blacks, and Asians from many countries. A major portion
of the population growth is driven by immigration, which means that
many new families are not tied to old patterns. Yet, despite the
relatively favorable structure that exists here for achieving racial
integration, the data indicate that, instead, new patterns of segregation
are being established...
Race, Place, and Opportunity: Racial
Change and Segregation in the Boston Metropolitan Area:
1990 - 2000, by Nancy McArdle
Race,
Place, and Opportunity (Boston): Part I
(in PDF Format. 3.78 MB file size, estimated 9 min on a 56
Kbps connection) 
Race, Place
and Opportunity (Boston): Part II
(in PDF Format. 2.71 MB file size, estimated 6 min 27 secs
on a 56 Kbps connection)
's residents in
the metropolitan area are redrawing the color line, this time in
the suburbs. Since the early 1980s, African-Americans and Latinos
have increasingly moved to the suburbs, but they have not been welcomed
into all communities. Rather, they are experiencing segregation
equivalent to that experienced in the inner city. This is showing
up not only in census data but also in our study of recent home
buying patterns, which indicate that, if left unaddressed, segregation
is only likely to spread. Despite this gloomy picture there are
some hopeful trends. There are certain suburbs that are stabilizing
racially and becoming more integrated. They offer the prospect that
the mistakes of the past will not be repeated in the future...
Integration or Resegregation: Metropolitan
Chicago at the Turn of the New Century, by
Guy Stuart, Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University
Integration
or Resegregation (Chicago): Full Report
(in PDF Format. 267 KB file size, estimated 37 secs on a
56 Kbps connection)
Race, Place, and Opportunity: Racial
Change and Segregation in the Chicago Metropolitan Area: 1990
- 2000, by Nancy
McArdle, The Civil
Rights Project at Harvard University
Race,
Place, and Opportunity (Chicago): Part I
(in PDF Format. 3.93 MB file size, estimated 9 min 8 secs
on a 56 Kbps connection)
Race, Place
and Opportunity (Chicago): Part II
(in PDF Format. 3.12 MB file size, estimated 7 min 15 secs
on a 56 Kbps connection)
's minorities
contributed all of [the metro's] net population growth during the
1990s, but stubbornly high levels of segregation for blacks in the
City and increasing segregation rates for Latinos metro-wide suggest
that much remains to be done to insure that these populations have
equal access to all communities... Indeed, while whites comprise
60 percent of the total suburban population, the average Latino
suburbanite lives in a census tract that is just 45 percent white,
down from 58 percent white in 1990. Latino/white segregation has
also increased in the City, and is now on par with black/white levels...
That these segregation levels are rising faster for Latino children
is especially troubling given the impacts of residential segregation
on educational opportunities...
Race, Place, and Opportunity: Racial
Change and Segregation in the San Diego Metropolitan Area: 1990
- 2000, by Nancy McArdle
Race,
Place, and Opportunity (San Diego): Part I
(in PDF Format. 1.89 MB file size, estimated 4 min 23 secs
on a 56 Kbps connection)
Race, Place and
Opportunity (San Diego): Part II
(in PDF Format. 2.63 MB file size, estimated 6 min 6 secs
on a 56 Kbps connection)
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