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Title: Outline


1
Outline
  • Review Question Grading Mistake
  • Test Review
  • Inability of Labor Markets to Provide for All
  • Joblessness and Other Problems
  • Social Organization
  • Doug Massey and Segregation
  • Stop me at 3pm to talk about Fundraising Lose
    Ends and the Trip to Campus

2
My MistakeDidnt give you credit for the
following MUST HAND IN AGAIN
  • Week 5    Poverty and Self Interest
  • Sociology 315 Assignment
  • Week 5 Readings
  • Due on Tuesday (2/9/10)
  • 1. In chapter 4, Rank argues that is in
    everyones self interest to conclude that
    widespread poverty within our border isunwise,
    unjust, and intolerable(Rank 2005 87). His
    first line of argument involves the risk of
    poverty across the American life course. For
    this question please describe what is meant by
    the term life course and explain how the Panel
    Study of Income Dynamics (PSID) allows
    researchers to study the life course.

3
Exam 1
  • What to say
  • Median grade was a B 1/2 of you got a B or
    higher ½ of you got a B or lower 80 of you
    got a C or higher
  • Exam was worth 20 of your gradeNext test worth
    another 20
  • 40 of your grade is determined by the review
    questions
  • If youre not doing them, or not taking them
    seriously (and some of you are not) you are
    making a serious mistake
  • When the review questions to date are combined
    with exam, some of you are in excellent
    shapemost of you are doing fine and moving in
    the right directionsome of you are in deep
    trouble

4
Rank and the Inability of the Labor Market to
Support All Citizens
  • March 2010 US Census Bureau Release
  • Over 4 million full time workers are poor

5
From Ghetto to Jobless Ghettoes
  • The manufacturing losses in some northern
    cities have been staggering(Wilson 1996 29)
  • North Lawndale Neighborhood in Chicago loses
    57,000 manufacturing jobs
  • Manufacturing Jobs Lost Between 1967-1987
  • Pct. Change Total Lost
  • Philadelphia 64 160,000
  • Chicago 60 500,000
  • New York 58 gt500,000
  • Detroit 51 108,000
  • Note video clip on Blacks in the Steel Industry

6
Joblessness Ghetto Related BehaviorA Culture
of Poverty
  • the residents of these jobless black poverty
    areas face certain social constraints on the
    choices they can make in their daily lives. These
    constraints, combined with restricted
    opportunities in the larger society, lead to
    ghetto-related behavior and attitudes- that is,
    behavior and attitudes that are found more
    frequently in ghetto neighborhoods than in
    neighborhoods that feature even modest levels of
    poverty and local employment. Ghetto-related
    behavior and attitudes often reinforce the
    economic marginality of the residents in jobless
    ghettos (Wilson 1996 52)

7
Wilson on Structure and Culture
  • Wilson asks his readers to examine social
    action- including behavior, habits, skills,
    styles, orientations attitudes within a broader
    structure of opportunities and constraints that
    have evolved over time(Wilson 1996 54).
  • Situationally Adaptive Social Structure ?
    Cultural Response? Shapes the Social Structure?
  • This is not to argue that individuals and groups
    lack the freedom to make their own choices,
    engage in certain styles and orientations, but it
    is to say that these decisions and actions occur
    within a context of constraints and opportunities
    that are drastically different from those present
    in middle class society(Wilson 1996 55)

8
Ghetto Related Behavior and the Structure of
Opportunity
  • Wilson asks his readers to examine social
    action- including behavior, habits, skills,
    styles, orientations attitudes within a broader
    structure of opportunities and constraints that
    have evolved over time(Wilson 1996 54). He
    urges us to note the urban poor make choices
    within a context of constraints and
    opportunities that are drastically different from
    those of middle class society (Wilson 1996 54).
    This does not mean you have to approve of such
    choices. As sociologists, you are asked to
    examine them within a broader context.
  • With this in mind, explain why drug dealing
    becomes a reasonable career choice for some of
    the people that Wilson interviews. Be sure to
    incorporate at least one direct quote from one of
    the interviewees into your answer.

9
Drug Dealing as Rational Choice
  • Im a cocaine dealer -- cause I cant get a
    decent ass job. So, what other choices do I
    have? I have to feed my familydo I work? I work.
    Seedont bring me that bullshit. I been working
    since I was 15 years old. I had to work to take
    care of my mother and father and sisters. p.58
  • Me myself I have sold marijuana. Im not a drug
    pusher, but Im just trying make endsIm trying
    to keep bread on the talbe- I have two babies.
    p.58
  • Like I was saying, you can make more money
    dealing drubs than your job, anybodyI can take
    you to a place where cars come through like this
    all day like traffic p.59

10
Wilson
  • Maybe a rational choice for the individual, but
    high levels of drug activity bring other problems
    the community
  • Violence and Guns
  • Turf battles, theft, crime.
  • This affects norms and action of others not
    involved in drug trade
  • Others arm themselves
  • Code of the Street evolves
  • Norms that provide for survival in high poverty
    neighborhoods, but which dont transfer to
    mainstream society

11
Outline
  • Wilson and Social Capital
  • Wilson and Bourdieu
  • Doug Massey and Segregation
  • Creating a Segregated America
  • Concentration of Poverty
  • Maintaining a Segregated America
  • The Effect of a Segregated America
  • Waiting to hear back from Ministerunless there
    are pressing issues, we will talk trip
    fundraising next week
  • Please bring Reflection set 3 (the ones that
    were due the day the ministers came) class next
    week.

12
My MistakeDidnt give you credit for the
following MUST HAND IN AGAIN
  • Week 5    Poverty and Self Interest
  • Sociology 315 Assignment
  • Week 5 Readings
  • Due on Tuesday (2/9/10)
  • 1. In chapter 4, Rank argues that is in
    everyones self interest to conclude that
    widespread poverty within our border isunwise,
    unjust, and intolerable(Rank 2005 87). His
    first line of argument involves the risk of
    poverty across the American life course. For
    this question please describe what is meant by
    the term life course and explain how the Panel
    Study of Income Dynamics (PSID) allows
    researchers to study the life course.

13
Wilson
  • High levels of drug activity bring other
    problems
  • Neighborhoods become more dangerous people
    decrease their involvement in voluntary
    associations and informal social control networks
    essential to maintain the social organization of
    the neighborhood (Wilson 1996 61)
  • Can translate this from soc-speak to English?

14
Neighborhood Social Organization (Wilson 1996 20)
  • Less Social capital
  • Interpersonal networks, friendship networks, and
    networks of family relations that
  • Can be tapped for jobs and mobility
  • Enforce norms in society
  • In strong neighborhoods, social capital links
    households together and helps organize the
    community
  • Examples from Wilson? Or maybe your life?

15
Wilson and Social Control
  • Neighborhoods with high levels of social
    organization that connect adults by means of an
    extensive set of obligations, expectations, and
    social networks- are in a better position to
    control and supervise activities and behavior of
    children. Wilson, p. 62
  • Connected neighbors observe, report on and
    discuss the behavior the childrennetworks
    reinforce disciplinebecause other adults assume
    responsibility for maintaining a public or social
    behavior even on the part of children that are
    not their own. p. 62

16
Neighborhood Social Organization (Wilson 1996 20)
  • In High Poverty Neighborhoods
  • Networks often weaker, more social isolation
  • Work on Philly and Denver suggests social
    isolation is deliberately practiced by parents in
    dangerous neighborhoods
  • Networks that do exist may be helpful in ghetto
    milieu but less helpful in promoting well being
    of kids in larger society

17
Beyond Informal NetworksLittle Organizational
Infrastructure
  • High Poverty Neighborhoods lack strong
    organizational capacity or an institutional
    resource base that would provide an extra layer
    of social organization in their neighborhoods
    (Wilson 1996 64)
  • Low rates of residential participation in
    voluntary (PTO, block associations, neighborhood
    watch) formal organizations (churches, political
    parties) and inform networks (bowling teams,
    playgroups, card games)

18
Economy
State
Civil Society in Middle Class Neighborhood
Political Party
Union
Professional Association
Neighborhood Watch
Rotary Club
Food Bank
Church
Bowling Team
Individual
19
Economy
State
Civil Society in Poor Neighborhood
Informal Neighborhood Connections
Food Bank
Church
Individual
20
Economy
State
Civil Society in Middle Class Neighborhood
Political Party
Union
Professional Association
Neighborhood Watch
Rotary Club
Food Bank
Church
Bowling Team
Individual
21
Wilson and Social Control
  • A weak institutional resource base is what
    distinguishes high jobless inner city
    neighborhoods form stable middle class and
    working class areas. p. 64
  • Weaker organizational basis and fewer
    institutional resources
  • Neighborhood Associations, Block Organizations,
    cub scouts, PTO, etc.
  • This a gap the CEM is trying to fill
  • Research shows that this makes it hard to control
    behavior in a neighborhood
  • The higher the density and stability of formal
    organizations, the less the illicit activities
    such as drug trafficking, crime, prostitution,
    and gang formation can take root in the
    neighborhood. p. 64

22
When all is said and done
  • In short, social isolation deprives inner city
    residents not only of conventional role models,
    whose strong presence once buffered the effects
    of neighborhood joblessness, but also of the
    social resources (including social contacts)
    provided by mainstream social networks that
    facilitate social and economic advancement in a
    modern industrial society. (Wilson 1996 66).

23
Joblessness is about more than just money
  • where jobs are scarce, where people rarely, if
    ever, have the opportunity to help their friends
    and neighbors find jobs, and where there is a
    disruptive or degraded school life purporting to
    prepare youngsters for eventual participation in
    the workforce, many people eventually lose their
    feeling of connectedness to work in the formal
    economy they no longer expect work to be a
    regular, and regulating, force in their lives.
    (Wilson, p.52)
  • What does it mean to say that work is about more
    than just money?

24
Bourdieu and Work
  • It is not just about making a living
  • It constitutes a framework for daily behavior
    and patterns of interaction because it imposes
    disciplines and regularities. p.73
  • Without work and regular income a person lacks a
    coherent organization of the present- that is a
    system of concrete expectations and goals.
  • Everybody needs someplace to go.- Michael
    Chabon
  • Increased levels of depression, lack of self
    efficacy (feeling that you can take steps to
    achieve goals in a given situation) and
    hopelessness
  • They took all the hope away. Man in Video
  • These feelings can spawn further problematic
    behavior
  • Substance Abuse

25
Economic Restructuring, the surbanization of
jobs, and Segregation
  • Economic Restructuring has big impact on African
    Americans given where their occupational
    distribution
  • Important to be clearMost Blacks are not poor.
  • Inner city African Americans are
    overrepresented in areas of high to extremely
    high poverty concentration p.51
  • And underpresented in the areas where job growth
    is now concentrated
  • This has led to research aimed in understanding
    the concentration and segregation

26
Massey Supplements Wilson
  • My purpose is to supplement Wilsons theoretical
    argument by introducing residential segregation
    as a key conditioning variable in the social
    transformation of the ghetto and to illustrate
    the crucial role it plays in concentrating
    poverty and creating the underclass (Massey
    1990 330)
  • Massys argument In the absence of racial
    segregation, the economic dislocations of the
    1970s would not have produced concentrated
    poverty or led to emergence of a socially and
    spatially isolated underclass. (Massey, p.330)

27
Suburbanization of Employment
  • Donut Shaped Development Share of Jobs within 3,
    10, gt 10 mile Radius of central city, 1996

28
Urban population faced with suburban job growth
  • Spatial Mismatch
  • The demand for labor has shifted away from
    neighborhoods where blacks are concentrated in
    favor of suburban areas
  • Chicago as an Example
  • 1970-1990, 60 of new jobs in Chicago area were
    created in the Northern Suburbs
  • Blacks are less than 2 of that populationHow to
    explain this?
  • By 1990, Chicago Accounted for just 37 of the
    jobs in metro-region

29
Back to Chicago.
  • Why arent Blacks in the suburbs where the growth
    is?
  • Video Clip from the Promised Land
  • What prevented blacks from following whites to
    the new suburban neighborhoods that were built
    following World War II?
  • How did the city of Chicago decide to address the
    lack of housing for blacks in Chicago?
  • You will sometimes hear the term perpendicular
    segregation, vertical ghettoes or ghettoes in
    the sky. Explain what is meant by these terms.
  • How did people seem to like the Robert Taylor
    homes?

30
Creating a Segregated America
  • Deliberate private and public choices made by
    WhitesLets explore.
  • American Apartheid, Massey and Denton

Isolation Indices by Year Isolation Indices by Year Isolation Indices by Year Isolation Indices by Year
1890 1970
Chicago 8.1 89.2
Philly 11.7 75.6
NY 3.6 60.2
Avg 6.7 73.5
31
Creating a Segregated America
  • Restrictive Covenants (note next slide)
  • Legally binding contracts signed by neighborhood
    residents to keep blacks out of neighborhood
  • Property owners agreed not to permit a black to
    own, occupy or lease property
  • Usually valid for 20 years and became enforceable
    when 75 of homeowners in an area had signed.
  • Used widely from 1910 until 1948
  • Federal Government urged their use until 1950

32
(No Transcript)
33
Creating a Segregated America
  • White engaged in violent attacks, mob
    behaviorintimidation
  • Whites Formed Neighborhood Organizations to
    non-violently apply pressure
  • Lobbied for zoning restrictions on housing
  • Boycott realtors who deal with blacks
  • Boycott businesses who deal with blacks
  • Collect funds to buy property from sellers
    (Archie Bunker)
  • Buyout blacks

34
Creating a Segregated America
  • Survey of Real Estate Agents (1950s)
  • 80 refused to sell blacks property in white
    neighborhoods
  • 56 simply refused to deal with blacks

35
Creating a Segregated America Government Role
  • White Public opinion favors discrimination
  • Do you think there should be separate sections
    in towns and cities for Negroes to live in?
  • 84 of Whites say yes in 1942
  • Federal Housing Authority Underwriting Manual,
    1939
  • if a neighborhood is to retain stability, it is
    necessary that properties shall continue to be
    occupied by the same social and racial classes.

36
Creating a Segregated America Government Role
  • Overtly Discriminatory Government Policies
  • Federal Housing Authority recommends use of
    restrictive covenants
  • Recommendation remains in underwriting manual
    even after Supreme Court rules restrictive
    covenants unconstitutional

37
Creating a Segregated America Government Role
  • Government Lending Agents engage in Redlining
  • the practice of financial lenders refusing to
    grant home and commercial loans in minority and
    racially changing neighborhood
  • Neighborhoods rated into 4 categories
  • Black neighborhoods rated in lowest categories
  • within such a low price or rent range as to
    attract undesirable elements.
  • Areas would be outlined in red pen and denied
    loans

38
Building the suburbsneglecting the cities
  • In 1966, Paterson and Camden New Jersey both had
    no FHA loans.
  • Nassau County in Long Island had 60 times more
    loans than the Bronx.
  • With no loans, houses cant be maintained
  • Without access to credit, houses cant be
    purchasedand sold, which depresses wealth in
    these communities

39
Massey and Denton, American Apartheid
  • Given the importance of the FHA in the
    residential housing market, such blanket
    redlining sent strong signals to private lending
    institutions, which followed suit and avoided
    making loans within affected areas. The lack of
    loan capital flowing into minority areas made it
    impossible for owners to sell their homes,
    leading to steep declines in property values and
    a pattern of disrepair, deterioration, vacancy
    and abandonment. Thus by the 1950s, many cities
    were locked in a spiral of decline that was
    directly encouraged and largely supported by
    federal housing policies. As poor blacks from the
    south entered cities in large numbers, middle
    class whites fled to the suburbs to escape them
    and to insulate themselves from the social
    problems that accompanied the rising tide of
    poor.

40
Maintaining the Ghetto
  • If Blacks cant spread outWhat do you do? What
    did they do in Chicago?
  • Build Up.
  • 1950s and 1960s Government Housing Projects
  • Decent Modern Accommodations
  • Projects often nice
  • But still Segregation
  • Reservations in the Sky,Vertical or Perpendicular
    Ghettos

41
Maintaining the Ghetto
  • Double edged swordNew but segregated
  • By both race and class
  • The replacement of low density slums with
    high-density towers of poor families also reduced
    the class diversity of the ghetto and brought
    about a geographic concentration of poverty that
    was previously unimaginable. This new segregation
    of blacks in economic as well as social terms-
    was the direct result of unprecedented
    collaboration between local and national
    government.
  • Massey and Denton, p.57

42
Explaining Concentrated Poverty
  • Concentrated Poverty as result of strong
    interaction between the level of segregation and
    changes in the structure of income distribution.
    (Massey, p.331)
  • Bumper Sticker
  • High Poverty Rate High Segregation Rate
    Highest Levels of Poverty Concentration
  • Massey uses a model to show the mechanism that
    leads to this situation
  • Try not to have a brain hemorrhage try to follow
    the logic I am not going to show you the math
    and equationsif you interested you can look at
    the original article
  • American Apartheid Segregation and the Making of
    the Underclass Author(s) Douglas S. Massey
    Source The American Journal of Sociology, Vol.
    96, No. 2 (Sep., 1990), pp. 329-357 Published by
    The University of Chicago Press Stable

43
Masseys ModelA Picture of America1970
  • Blacks not permitted into many sectors of the
    economy, and therefore have higher rates of
    poverty
  • Black poverty level in City X is 20
  • White poverty level in City X is 10
  • Picture more or less corresponds to NYC and
    Chicago

44
Masseys Model A city without Segregation
  • If Blacks Whites live in integrated
    neighborhoods poverty rate in all neighborhoods
    is 12.5

B2000 W6000 B2000 W6000 B2000 W6000 B2000 W6000
B2000 W6000 B2000 W6000 B2000 W6000 B2000 W6000
B2000 W6000 B2000 W6000 B2000 W6000 B2000 W6000
B2000 W6000 B2000 W6000 B2000 W6000 B2000 W6000
45
Masseys ModelIf Blacks are Barred from 4
Northern NeighborhoodsAverage white environment
improves as poverty reduced
  • All Black experience a poverty rate of 13.3
  • Some Whites live in neighborhoods with 10 poor
    (no Blacks)on average White are in neighborhoods
    with poverty rate of 12.2

B0 W8000 B0 W8000 B0 W8000 B0 W8000
B2666 W5334 B2666 W5334 B2666 W5334 B2666 W5334
B2666 W5334 B2666 W5334 B2666 W5334 B2666 W5334
B2666 W5334 B2666 W5334 B2666 W5334 B2666 W5334
46
As segregation increases, so does level of
poverty in Black communitieswhile level in White
communities drops
  • All Whites live in segregated communityWhite
    poverty is 10...so that is the avg. for each
    neighborhood
  • All Blacks live in segregated communityBlack
    poverty is 20...so that is the avg. for each
    neighborhood

B0 W8000 B0 W8000 B0 W8000 B0 W8000
B0 W8000 B0 W8000 B0 W8000 B0 W8000
B0 W8000 B0 W8000 B0 W8000 B0 W8000
B8000 W0 B8000 W0 B8000 W0 B8000 W0
47
Now add class segregation to racial segregation
  • Middle class blacks leave poorest neighborhoods
  • Class segregation reduces poverty in the non-poor
    neighborhoods and increases it on the poor sides
  • Watch

48
Racial Segregation w/ Class Segregation Poor
Blacks become concentrated in HIGH POVERTY
NEIGHBORHOODS
  • Poor blacks concentrated in high poverty areas

Pb0 Pw1600 Pb0 Pw1600 Pb0 Pw0 Pb0 Pw0
Pb0 Pw1600 Pb0 Pw1600 Pb0 Pw0 Pb0 Pw0
Pb0 Pw1600 Pb0 Pw1600 Pb0 Pw0 Pb0 Pw0
Pb3200 Pw0 Pb3200 Pw0 Pb0 Pw0 Pb0 Pw0
49
Now add class segregation to racial segregation
  • Class segregation reduces poverty in the non-poor
    neighborhoods and increases it on the poor sides
  • The imposition of racial segregation on a
    residential structure that is also segregated
    works to the detriment of poor blacks and to the
    benefit of poor whites(Massey 1990 336).
  • All poor Blacks end up in neighborhoods with 40
    poverty

50
Masseys Main Finding...
  • In a segregated environment, any exogenous
    economic shock that causes a downward shift in
    the distribution of minority income (e.g., the
    closing of factories, the mechanization of
    production, the suburbanization of employment)
    will not only bring about an increase in the
    poverty rate for the group as a whole, it will
    also cause an increase in the geographic
    concentration of poverty (Massey 1990 337).
  • The economic shock is concentrated confined to
    a small number of minority neighborhoods the
    greater the segregation, the smaller the number
    of neighborhoods absorbing the shock, and the
    more severe the resulting concentration of
    poverty(Massey 1990 337)
  • Can anyone interpret this?

51
A Tangle of PathologyBusiness Failure
  • A major consequence of any downward shift in the
    distributional structure of black income is a
    reduction in buying power in neighborhoods where
    poor blacks live (Massey 1990 344).
  • No race and class segregation, the loss of buying
    power is dispersed across the city
  • With race and class segregation, the loss of
    buying power is concentrated in a few
    neighborhoods
  • In poor neighborhoods, therefore, retail profits
    fall, services are cut back, and businesses
    inevitably close(Massey 1990 345)
  • Racial segregation takes the overall loss in
    Black income, concentrates it spatially, and
    focuses on fragile neighborhoods that are least
    able to absorb it(Massey 1990 345)

52
A Tangle of PathologyHousing Deterioration
  • Homeowners less able to make repairs
  • Cant afford repairsSupply stores close
  • Landlords cant recover costs of building
    maintenance
  • Buildings are abandonedneighborhoods deteriorate

53
A Tangle of Pathology Everything becomes more
concentrated
  • Percentage of welfare dependent families
    increases
  • Percentage of female headed families increases
  • Mortality risks increase
  • Lack of health care
  • Unhealthy behavior
  • Education suffers
  • Support for schools comes from local
    sourcesdecline in neighborhood reduces school
    funding
  • Crime rates increasenote next slide

54
(No Transcript)
55
(No Transcript)
56
A Tangle of Pathology
  • Racial segregation is the structural condition
    imposed on blacks that makes intensely deprived
    communities possible, even likely. When racial
    segregation occurs in the class-segregated
    environment of the typical American city, it
    concentrates income deprivation within a small
    number of poor black areas and generates social
    and economic conditions of intense disadvantage
    (Massey 1990 350).
  • These conditions are mutually reinforcing and
    cumulative, leading directly to the creation of
    underclass communities typified by high rates of
    family disruption, welfare dependence, crime,
    mortality, and educational failure(Maseey 1990
    350)

57
Outline
  • Doug Massey and Segregation
  • Fundraising
  • Trip to Campus

58
My MistakeDidnt give you credit for the
following MUST HAND IN AGAIN
  • Week 5    Poverty and Self Interest
  • Sociology 315 Assignment
  • Week 5 Readings
  • Due on Tuesday (2/9/10)
  • 1. In chapter 4, Rank argues that is in
    everyones self interest to conclude that
    widespread poverty within our border isunwise,
    unjust, and intolerable(Rank 2005 87). His
    first line of argument involves the risk of
    poverty across the American life course. For
    this question please describe what is meant by
    the term life course and explain how the Panel
    Study of Income Dynamics (PSID) allows
    researchers to study the life course.

59
Creating a Segregated America
  • Deliberate private and public choices made by
    Whites
  • You cant just wave a magic wand an undo
    thisCensusScope -- Segregation Dissimilarity
    Indices
  • The dissimilarity index (D), which may be
    interpreted as the proportion of the minority
    racial/ethnic group of interest (m) that would
    need to move across sub-units in order to achieve
    an even distribution, is given by

Isolation Indices by Year Isolation Indices by Year Isolation Indices by Year Isolation Indices by Year
1930 1970 1990
Chicago 8.1 89.2 83.9
Philly 11.7 75.6 72.2
Avg 31.7 73.5 64.9
60
Strategies are effective1933 Sociological Study
of Chicago
  • Immigrant enclaves were never homogenous
  • Always other nationalities
  • Ethnics are never a majority of neighborhood
  • Except Poles, 54
  • Blacks were, 82 of population
  • Most European Did not live in the Ethnic Hood
  • 3 of Irish did..
  • 50 of Italians did
  • 93 of Blacks did
  • European Ethnic Enclaves as Transition to Suburbs
  • Blacks find it hard to leave ghetto

61
Masseys Main Finding...
  • In a segregated environment, any exogenous
    economic shock that causes a downward shift in
    the distribution of minority income (e.g., the
    closing of factories, the mechanization of
    production, the suburbanization of employment)
    will not only bring about an increase in the
    poverty rate for the group as a whole, it will
    also cause an increase in the geographic
    concentration of poverty (Massey 1990 337).
  • The economic shock is concentrated confined to
    a small number of minority neighborhoods the
    greater the segregation, the smaller the number
    of neighborhoods absorbing the shock, and the
    more severe the resulting concentration of
    poverty(Massey 1990 337)
  • Can anyone interpret this?

62
Continued Segregation
  • 5. Massey suggests that it is a fundamental myth
    that the era of racial segregation is over.
    Please present one piece of statistical evidence
    that supports this claim.

63
Continued Segregation
64
South Africa and the US
65
Continued Segregation
  • CensusScope -- Segregation Dissimilarity Indices
  • The dissimilarity index (D), which may be
    interpreted as the proportion of the minority
    racial/ethnic group of interest (m) that would
    need to move across sub-units in order to achieve
    an even distribution, is given by

66
Continued Segregation
  • 6. Massey notes that a variety of explanations
    for why segregation persists. He dismisses
    several common explanations and offers others.
  • Anyone recall some of the dismissed theories

67
Not just class or income...Interpret this chart
please
68
Even Affluent Blacks are Segregated
69
Not Black Preference to live in segregated
neighborhoods
70
Continued Segregation
  • 6. Massey notes that a variety of explanations
    for why segregation persists. He dismisses
    several common explanations and offers others.
    Please summarize one of the explanations that he
    offers. Be sure to cite the text in your answer.

71
Why Segregation Most Whites Prefer to Live in
Neighborhoods that are Mostly White
72
A lot of Whites prefer no Blacksor other
minorities

73
Experiment, December 2001 American Sociological
Review
  • So how come Whites dont seem to want to live
    with Blacks
  • Is race the factor, or concerns about crime,
    schools etc. that Whites may associate with
    Black stereotypes?

74
Experiment, December 2001 American Sociological
Review
  • Random Sample of Whites asked
  • Imagine that you are looking for a new house and
    that you have two school aged children. You find
    a house that you like much better than any other
    house- it has everything youd been looking for,
    it is close to work, and it within your price
    range.
  • Asked with random combinations of following
  • Public schools (low, medium, high)
  • Neighborhood is 5 to 100 Black, Asian, Hisp
  • Property Values are declining, stable,
    increasing
  • Crime rate is low, average, high

75
Experiment, Findings
  • Puzzle Is race the factor, or crime, schools
    etc.
  • Findings
  • Regardless of racial/ethnic make up of
    neighborhood, no one wants high crime, bad
    schools
  • Percent Of Asians and Hispanic, no effect on
    choice
  • Percent Of Blacks has effect, even when schools
    good, property up, crime low
  • If 35 Black, Whites would not buy
  • If 35 Asian or Hispanic, Whites would buy
  • Conclusion Stereotypes prejudice persist

76
Experiment, Findings
  • What made Whites more likely to buy when Blacks
    were present
  • Number of Black friends they had
  • Suggests Contact reduces prejudice
  • Integrated schools
  • Affirmative Action in college

77
Another Explanation.Old fashioned Discrimination
78
Residential Segregation Why? Old fashioned
Discrimination
  • U.S Government Experiments Paired Samples
  • Blacks discriminated against by Realtors Others
  • 56 of the time in rental market
  • 59 of the time in home sales
  • 15 told nothing available
  • Shown 18 fewer units
  • 21 steered to minority neighborhoodsin my case
    away

79
Continued Segregation
  • 7. Massey presents several ways that segregation
    perpetuate disadvantage. Please explain two ways
    that segregation perpetuates disadvantage. Make
    sure that one of your explanations addresses the
    concentration of poverty. Be sure to cite the
    text in your answer.

80
Segregation and Disadvantage
81
Segregation and Disadvantage
82
Segregation and Disadvantage
83
Segregation and Opporunity
  • So what can be done to eliminate concentrations
    of poverty that limit opportunity for many Black
    Americans?

84
Have you heard anyone talk about thisin NJ the
talk is about opposing it
85
Fundraising and a Trip to Campus
  • For each task you volunteer for and complete,
    Ill give ¼ point on your assignment grade
  • Fundraising new information or loose ends
  • Change jars Track Lacrosse, other?
  • Trip to Campus
  • Spring Carnival

86
  • 1. Describe your feelings about your community
    activity. Is it what you expected? Is it
    worthwhile? Why or why not?

87
  • 2. Please describe the most fulfilling thing that
    you have experienced while with the afterschool
    program.

88
  • 3. Please describe the most challenging thing
    that you have experienced while with the
    afterschool program.

89
  • 4. Are there things that you have learned from
    the children or others that you work with at
    Chester Eastside Ministries? If so, what?

90
  • 5. What have you learned about yourself from this
    experience? Have you learned any new skills or
    developed a new interest? Has the experience
    challenged or made you question any ideas that
    you previously held?

91
  • 6. Has your community activity helped you learn
    something new about poverty in America? Has it
    raised any new questions in your mind?

92
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  • Poverty and Family
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