Title: Opportunity Matters Place, Space and Life Outcomes
1Opportunity MattersPlace, Space and Life Outcomes
Jason Reece, AICP Denis Rhoden, AICP Kirwan
Institute for the Study of Race Ethnicity
2Place and Life Outcomes
- Where you live is more important than what you
live in - Housing -- in particular its location -- is the
primary mechanism for accessing opportunity in
our society - Housing location determines the quality of
schools children attend, the quality of public
services they receive, access to employment and
transportation, exposure to health risks, access
to health care, etc. - For those living in high poverty neighborhoods,
these factors can significantly inhibit life
outcomes
3Housing and Opportunity
- Housing is Critical in Determining Access to
Opportunity
4The Web of Opportunity
- Opportunities in our society are geographically
distributed (and often clustered) throughout
metropolitan areas - This creates winner and loser communities or
high and low opportunity communities - Your location within this web of opportunity
plays a decisive role in your life potential and
outcomes - Individual characteristics still matter
- but so does access to opportunity, such as good
schools, health care, child care, and job
networks
5The Cumulative Impacts of Racial and Opportunity
Segregation
Segregation impacts a number of life-opportunities
Impacts on Health
School Segregation
Impacts on Educational Achievement
Exposure to crime arrest
Transportation limitations and other inequitable
public services
Job segregation
Neighborhood Segregation
Racial stigma, other psychological impacts
Impacts on community power and individual assets
Adapted from figure by Barbara Reskin at
http//faculty.washington.edu/reskin/
6Economic Conditions
High Opportunity
Low Opportunity
7School Conditions
High Opportunity
Low Opportunity
8Communities of Opportunity
- The Communities of Opportunity framework is a
model of fair housing and community development - The model is based on the premises that
- Everyone should have fair access to the critical
opportunity structures needed to succeed in life - Affirmatively connecting people to opportunity
creates positive, transformative change in
communities
9Communities of Opportunity
- The Communities of Opportunity model advocates
for a fair investment in all of a regions people
and neighborhoods -- to improve the life outcomes
of all citizens, and to improve the health of the
entire region - A focus on people, investing in our residents
(and their communities) to produce transformative
change
10People, Places and Linkages
- People
- We need to build human capital through improved
wealth-building, educational achievement, and
social and political empowerment - Examples
- Promoting/protecting homeownership for residents,
helping low income families access tax credits,
leadership training, job training, asset building
strategies, providing stable/supportive housing
to those in need
11People, Places and Linkages
- Places
- We must invest in places by supporting
neighborhood development initiatives, attracting
jobs with living wages and advancement
opportunities, and demanding high-quality local
services for all neighborhoods, such as local
public schools that perform - Examples
- Improving school conditions, providing
supplemental educational opportunities,
supporting minority and small businesses in
distressed communities, attracting jobs, spurring
investment in housing and infrastructure,
addressing vacant properties
12People, Places and Linkages
- Linkages
- We must also encourage better links among people
and places, fostering mobility through
high-quality public transportation services and
region-wide housing mobility programs - Examples
- Supporting and promoting fair housing, public
transportation initiatives, allowing urban
students access to suburban schools
13Neighborhoods of Opportunity and African American
MalesA Case Study of Seven Metropolitan Regions
14Indicators Used in Analysis Neighborhoods (some
examples)
- Education Indicators
- Student poverty rates, test scores, student
teacher ratios - Economic Indicators
- Job access, unemployment, job trends
- Neighborhood Quality
- Vacant and abandoned properties, crime rates,
neighborhood poverty rates
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22Findings
- 2 out of 3 African American males in the seven
metropolitan areas were found in low opportunity
communities - Compared to 1 out 5 White males
23Youth 14 and Younger
- Similar results were found for younger males, 61
of African American males under 14 were found in
low opportunity communities
24Still More Questions To Answer
- Above we describe the proximity dimension of
opportunity, but how close are we to
understanding the access to opportunity
question? - Hypothetically, if everyone had access to
opportunity, how would the region look different
in terms of the distribution of Black and White
children? - Results
25Future Implications
- Opportunity is about a bundle of assets AND
expectations about the future. - Studying access or proximity at the group level
helps to understand how, yet the question to date
is why. - Need more deliberate connections Between African
American males other youths and African
American males to regions population. - Population trends show several ways out of the
shadow of isolation move to the suburbs, leave
regions, etc. Flight carries unique, because
opportunity (assets expectations) is dynamic
and unique across regions. - Declining suburbs
- Gentrification
- Each region should consider understanding and
developing strategic options to collocate and
create opportunity access and opportunity across
suburb, rural and urban environments, lift up
what works with objective and emotive measures.
26Questions or Comments? For More Information
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