居住隔离在全国范围内的兴起

Trevon Logan, John M. Parman
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引用次数: 148

摘要

本文介绍了一种新的基于个人层面数据的居住隔离测度。我们利用完整的人口普查手稿文件,以隔壁邻居的种族相似性为基础,得出种族隔离的衡量标准。我们的测量方法使我们能够对美国所有地区的种族隔离进行一致而全面的分析,并对种族隔离在时间和空间上的变化有更丰富的看法。我们表明,我们的措施的精细揭示了种族分类的方面,不能捕捉到传统的隔离指数。我们的措施可以区分一个地区种族同质性增加的影响和一个特定种族构成的地区内种族隔离的趋势。随着时间的推移,对基于邻居的种族隔离的分析确立了一些关于种族隔离的新事实。首先,从1880年到1940年,全国的种族隔离增加了一倍。其次,与之前的估计相反,我们发现南方的城市地区是该国种族隔离最严重的地区,而且一直如此。第三,20世纪种族隔离的急剧加剧并非由城市化、黑人迁移模式或白人向郊区的迁移所驱动,而是由全国范围内家庭层面种族分类的增加所导致的。在20世纪中期,非裔美国人家庭有非裔美国人邻居的可能性下降了超过15个百分点(超过25%的下降)。在美国的所有地区——北方和南方,城市和农村——种族隔离急剧增加。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The National Rise in Residential Segregation
This paper introduces a new measure of residential segregation based on individual-level data. We exploit complete census manuscript files to derive a measure of segregation based upon the racial similarity of next-door neighbors. Our measure allows us to analyze segregation consistently and comprehensively for all areas in the United States and allows for a richer view of the variation in segregation across time and space. We show that the fineness of our measure reveals aspects of racial sorting that cannot be captured by traditional segregation indices. Our measure can distinguish between the effects of increasing racial homogeneity of a location and the tendency to segregate within a location given a particular racial composition. Analysis of neighbor-based segregation over time establishes several new facts about segregation. First, segregation doubled nationally from 1880 to 1940. Second, contrary to previous estimates, we find that urban areas in the South were the most segregated in the country and remained so over time. Third, the dramatic increase in segregation in the twentieth century was not driven by urbanization, black migratory patterns, or white flight to suburban areas, but rather resulted from a national increase in racial sorting at the household level. The likelihood that an African American household had a non-African American neighbor declined by more than 15 percentage points (more than a 25% decrease) through the mid-twentieth century. In all areas of the United States -- North and South, urban and rural -- racial segregation increased dramatically.
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