Reports about Racial
Residential Segregation in 2000
Ethnic Diversity Grows,
Neighborhood Integration Lags Behind
http://mumford1.dyndns.org/cen2000/WholePop/WPreport/page1.html
This April 2001 report, from John Logan and his collaborators at the
Mumford Center at the State University of New York in Albany is the most
important and comprehensive summary of changes in racial residential segregation
in metropolitan United States from 1980 to 2000.
Segregating the
Children
http://mumford1.dyndns.org/cen2000/Under18Pop/U18Preport/page1.html
This
May, 2001 report from John Logan and his collaborators at the Mumford Center at
the State University of New York in Albany summarizes changes in the racial
segregation of persons under age 18 from 1990 to 2000 in American metropolitan
areas.
Choosing Segregation: Racial Imbalances in American Public
Schools: 1990-2000
http://mumford1.dyndns.org/cen2000/SchoolPop/SPReport/page1.html
This January 2002 report from John Logan and his collaborators at the
Mumford Center at the State University of New York in Albany summarizes changes
from 1990 to 2000 in the racial segregation and isolation of students enrolled
in the schools of 59 large metropolitan areas where the central city’s school
system enrolled at least 25,000 and 2,500 African Americans in the 1989-90
academic year. Racial residential
segregation in public schools is compared to racial residential segregation in
neighborhoods.
Hispanic Populations and
Their Residential Patterns in the Metropolis
http://mumford1.dyndns.org/cen2000/HispanicPop/HspReportNew/page1.html
This May, 2002 report from
John Logan and his collaborators at the Mumford Center at the State University
of New York in Albany describes the diverse components of the Spanish-origin
population in metropolitan areas in 2000 and presents measures of the
residential segregation of specific Spanish-origin groups from whites and from
blacks in these metropolises.
Racial Segregation in the
2000 Census: Promising News
http://www.brook.edu/dybdocroot/es/urban/census/glaeser.pdf
This April 2001 report by
Edward Glaeser and Jacob Vigdor of the Brookings Institution describes changes
in racial residential segregation in the 1990s and then presents a longer-run
view emphasizing the decrease in the residential segregation of blacks from
whites.
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