The Determinants of Neighborhood Quality

The Determinants of Neighborhood Quality
Author: John C. Weicher
Publisher:
Total Pages: 33
Release: 1979
Genre: African Americans
ISBN:

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Annual housing survey data are analyzed to determine whether place of residence has an impact upon employability and wage rate. This analysis is particularly directed towards the urban Black. Cf. Bibliographic information leaf.

Was Postwar Suburbanization "white Flight"?

Was Postwar Suburbanization
Author: Leah Platt Boustan
Publisher:
Total Pages: 56
Release: 2007
Genre: African Americans
ISBN:

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Residential segregation by jurisdiction generates disparities in public services and education. The distinctive American pattern - in which blacks live in cities and whites in suburbs - was enhanced by a large black migration from the rural South. I show that whites responded to this black influx by leaving cities and rule out an indirect effect on housing prices as a sole cause. I instrument for changes in black population by using local economic conditions to predict black migration from southern states and assigning predicted flows to northern cities according to established settlement patterns. The best causal estimates imply that each black arrival led to 2.7 white departures.

Competition in the Promised Land

Competition in the Promised Land
Author: Leah Platt Boustan
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Total Pages: 216
Release: 2020-06-09
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0691202494

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From 1940 to 1970, nearly four million black migrants left the American rural South to settle in the industrial cities of the North and West. Competition in the Promised Land provides a comprehensive account of the long-lasting effects of the influx of black workers on labor markets and urban space in receiving areas. Traditionally, the Great Black Migration has been lauded as a path to general black economic progress. Leah Boustan challenges this view, arguing instead that the migration produced winners and losers within the black community. Boustan shows that migrants themselves gained tremendously, more than doubling their earnings by moving North. But these new arrivals competed with existing black workers, limiting black–white wage convergence in Northern labor markets and slowing black economic growth. Furthermore, many white households responded to the black migration by relocating to the suburbs. White flight was motivated not only by neighborhood racial change but also by the desire on the part of white residents to avoid participating in the local public services and fiscal obligations of increasingly diverse cities. Employing historical census data and state-of-the-art econometric methods, Competition in the Promised Land revises our understanding of the Great Black Migration and its role in the transformation of American society.

The Black Migration

The Black Migration
Author: George W. Groh
Publisher:
Total Pages: 344
Release: 1972
Genre: African Americans
ISBN:

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Black Migration

Black Migration
Author: Florette Henri
Publisher: Anchor Books
Total Pages: 464
Release: 1975
Genre: Social Science
ISBN:

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Encyclopedia of the Great Black Migration

Encyclopedia of the Great Black Migration
Author: Steven Andrew Reich
Publisher:
Total Pages: 544
Release: 2006
Genre: Social Science
ISBN:

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Presents a collection of essays that explore the causes, experiences, and consequences of African American migrations during the twentieth-century.