Chicago's New Immigrants, Indigenous Poor, and Edge Cities
The settlement pattern of new immigrants in the Chi cago urban region diverges significantly from previous immigration periods, when employment was concentrated in the urban core. In recent decades, the rate of employment decentralization in the Chi cago area has accelerated, giving rise to edge cit...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 1997-01, Vol.551 (1), p.178-190 |
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creator | Greene, Richard P |
description | The settlement pattern of new immigrants in the Chi cago urban region diverges significantly from previous immigration periods, when employment was concentrated in the urban core. In recent decades, the rate of employment decentralization in the Chi cago area has accelerated, giving rise to edge cities, which are acquir ing an increasing share of the region's total employment. As a result, the new immigrants are in a far more favorable geographic position than the region's indigenous poor to compete in the local unskilled labor market. Meanwhile, with the absence of new immigrants set tling the region's traditional port-of-entry neighborhoods, thus not replacing the exiting middle class, large sections of Chicago's urban core are being bypassed, further isolating the indigenous poor from the economic mainstream. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1177/000271629755100113 |
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source | Access via SAGE; HeinOnline Law Journal Library |
title | Chicago's New Immigrants, Indigenous Poor, and Edge Cities |
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