Stuck in Place: Urban Neighborhoods and the End of Progress by Patrick Sharkey

By Patrick Sharkey

Within the Nineteen Sixties, many believed that the civil rights movement’s successes may foster a brand new period of racial equality in the USA. 4 many years later, the measure of racial inequality has slightly replaced. to appreciate what went flawed, Patrick Sharkey argues that we've got to appreciate what has occurred to African American groups during the last a number of many years. In Stuck in Place, Sharkey describes how political judgements and social guidelines have ended in serious disinvestment from black neighborhoods, chronic segregation, declining fiscal possibilities, and a growing to be hyperlink among African American groups and the felony justice system.

As a consequence, local inequality that existed within the Nineteen Seventies has been handed all the way down to the present new release of African americans. the most chronic varieties of racial inequality, comparable to gaps in source of revenue and try out ratings, can merely be defined via contemplating the neighborhoods within which black and white households have lived over a number of generations. This multigenerational nature of local inequality additionally implies that a brand new type of city coverage is important for our nation’s towns. Sharkey argues for city rules that experience the capability to create transformative and sustained alterations in city groups and the households that dwell inside them, and he outlines a sturdy city coverage schedule to maneuver in that course.

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Additional info for Stuck in Place: Urban Neighborhoods and the End of Progress Toward Racial Equality

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Neighborhoods who remain in the most affluent neighborhoods a generation later, and the last pair of columns shows the proportion that move downward into a less affluent neighborhood. S. neighborhoods a generation ago, only 39 percent remain there in the next generation. S. neighborhoods, four of them would still be found in an affluent neighborhood a generation later, while the remaining six would now be raising their children in neighborhoods that are less affluent than those in which they were raised.

What do these findings mean for families that are not hypothetical? They mean that the inequalities that existed among families a generation ago, in the 1970s, have been passed on to today’s families, with little change. They mean that the type of residential environment in which American families now live has been inherited from the previous generation. Even this depiction of continuity across generations is incomplete, however, because it suggests that the process of contextual mobility works in the same way for all groups within a society.

Some interesting results emerge from this analysis: I find that African Americans are much more likely than whites to remain in the same county in adulthood, as are children whose parents were married or owned their home during childhood, or who themselves were married or owned their home in adulthood. This latter finding suggests that home ownership and being married may create connections to a place that endure across generations. On the other hand, children who obtain more education and earn more income as adults are more likely to move on to a different county when they reach adulthood, suggesting that education may broaden the horizons of youth or provide new opportunities in different places.

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