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Farley, John E. – Urban Affairs Quarterly, 1991
Examines changes in patterns of Black-White housing segregation in St. Louis (Missouri) between 1980 and 1988 using data from the 1988 Dress Rehearsal Census. St. Louis exhibited a persistent pattern of segregation from 1940 to 1980. Finds the city remains quite segregated compared to 1980 national averages. (DM)
Descriptors: Blacks, Census Figures, Housing, Racial Segregation

Winsberg, Morton D. – Urban Affairs Quarterly, 1983
During the 1970s, most Black population growth in ten Florida cities occurred in White census tracts contiguous to tracts that were at least half-Black in 1970. Urban renewal and new public housing were influential in reducing the percentage of the Black population living in Black tracts. (Author/MJL)
Descriptors: Black Population Trends, Blacks, Economic Factors, Housing

Kapsis, Robert E. – Urban Affairs Quarterly, 1979
This paper assesses the relative importance of deprivation and social integration factors in accounting for neighborhood differences in feelings of powerlessness. (Author/RLV)
Descriptors: Blacks, Disadvantaged Environment, Individual Power, Neighborhood Integration

Farley, John E. – Urban Affairs Quarterly, 1983
1980 census data for the Saint Louis, Missouri, metropolitan area indicated (1) no change in central city desegregation and only a modest decline in suburban segregation; (2) rapid Black population growth in suburbs with low segregation indexes (signifying a possible racial turnover); and (3) repetition of central city segregation patterns in the…
Descriptors: Blacks, Metropolitan Areas, Population Trends, Racial Composition

Clay, Phillip I. – Urban Affairs Quarterly, 1979
The Black suburbanization that is occurring represents more of a resegregation of Blacks in particular sectors of suburbia than dispersal in an open housing market. (Author/RLV)
Descriptors: Blacks, Case Studies, Equal Opportunities (Jobs), Housing Opportunities

Massey, Douglas S.; Gross, Andrew B. – Urban Affairs Quarterly, 1991
White racial attitudes have shifted from a universal rejection of Black neighbors to acceptance of open housing in principle but not in practice. Declines in racial segregation between 1970 and 1980 were confined to urban areas with relatively few Blacks, and desegregation was accommodated without threatening White preferences for limited…
Descriptors: Blacks, Civil Rights Legislation, Housing Discrimination, Neighborhood Integration

Goering, John M.; Coulibably, Modibo – Urban Affairs Quarterly, 1989
Investigates the concepts and evidence needed to understand the extent of racial segregation in the Federal public housing program operating in metropolitan areas throughout the United States. Attempts to explain the level and variation of public housing segregation by examining legislative, programatic, and regional factors. Suggests directions…
Descriptors: Blacks, Federal Programs, Ghettos, Government Role

Galster, George C.; Keeney, W. Mark – Urban Affairs Quarterly, 1988
A cross-sectional simultaneous equation model is specified whereby metropolitan-wide levels of racial residential segregation, housing discrimination, interracial occupational dissimilarities, and Black/White mean incomes are endogenous. Results support the hypothesis of mutually causal interrelationships among these phenomena. Results of policy…
Descriptors: Blacks, Equal Opportunities (Jobs), Income, Labor Market

Fong, Eric – Urban Affairs Quarterly, 1994
Compares residential proximity patterns by race in U.S. and Canadian neighborhoods. The findings show that in the United States, but not in Canada, blacks appear to be at a disadvantage in the early stages of spatial assimilation, and other racial groups appear to actively avoid moving into neighborhoods with a dominant black presence. (GLR)
Descriptors: Asian Americans, Blacks, Census Figures, Comparative Analysis

Clark, William A. V. – Urban Affairs Quarterly, 1993
Reevaluates statistical studies by G. Galster (1986, 1987, 1988) and Galster and W. Keeney (1988) of segregation in housing, reanalyzing one of four model equations. The effects of discrimination are smaller than postulated previously. Direct estimates from housing discrimination surveys provide a rationale for these smaller effects. (SLD)
Descriptors: Blacks, Equations (Mathematics), Housing Discrimination, Incidence

Fainstein, Susan S.; Fainstein, Norman I. – Urban Affairs Quarterly, 1989
Blacks in cities remain segregated and economically disadvantaged. Differences between races are far more important than social stratification in Blacks' deteriorating economic condition. Because the spatial and political containment of Black populations has actually reduced their effect on cities' economic fortunes, political strategies for Black…
Descriptors: Black Influences, Blacks, Economic Impact, Economic Status