Moving toward Integration: The Past and Future of Fair Housing
Reducing residential segregation is the best way to reduce racial inequality in the United States. African American employment rates, earnings, test scores, even longevity all improve sharply as residential integration increases. Yet far too many participants in our policy and political conversation...
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Zusammenfassung: | Reducing residential segregation is the best way to reduce racial
inequality in the United States. African American employment rates,
earnings, test scores, even longevity all improve sharply as
residential integration increases. Yet far too many participants in
our policy and political conversations have come to believe that
the battle to integrate America's cities cannot be won. Richard
Sander, Yana Kucheva, and Jonathan Zasloff write that the pessimism
surrounding desegregation in housing arises from an inadequate
understanding of how segregation has evolved and how policy
interventions have already set many metropolitan areas on the path
to integration. Scholars have debated for decades whether America's
fair housing laws are effective. Moving toward Integration
provides the most definitive account to date of how those laws were
shaped and implemented and why they had a much larger impact in
some parts of the country than others. It uses fresh evidence and
better analytic tools to show when factors like exclusionary zoning
and income differences between blacks and whites pose substantial
obstacles to broad integration, and when they do not. Through its
interdisciplinary approach and use of rich new data sources,
Moving toward Integration offers the first comprehensive
analysis of American housing segregation. It explains why racial
segregation has been resilient even in an increasingly diverse and
tolerant society, and it demonstrates how public policy can align
with demographic trends to achieve broad housing integration within
a generation. |
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DOI: | 10.2307/j.ctv24trdcq |