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The Ecology of Inequality: Minorities and the Concentration of Poverty, 1970-1980
549
Citations
18
References
1990
Year
Population PovertyIncome JusticeRegional DisparitiesIncome DistributionIncome InequalityPoverty ReductionRacial Segregation StudiesSocial SciencesPoverty ConcentrationAfrican American StudiesWealth JusticePovertyPoverty AlleviationPublic HealthEconomic InequalitySocio-economic IssueSocial InequalityEconomicsU.s. Urban SocietyDisadvantaged BackgroundPopulation InequalitySociologyIncome StudiesSpatial DemographyDemography
The study investigates how poverty concentration evolved among white, black, Hispanic, and Asian populations across 60 U.S. metropolitan areas between 1970 and 1980. It analyzes shifts in income distribution, inequality, and spatial segregation, linking these dynamics to changes in poverty concentration.
This article examines trends in the geographic concentration of poverty among whites, blacks, Hispanics, and Asians in 60 U.S. mentropolitan areas from 1970 to 1980. It describes changes in the distributional structure of income, the extent of income inequality, and the degree of spatial segretation by income. These factors are then related to levels and trends in poverty concentration. Concentrated urban poverty is confined principally to blacks outside the West and to Hispanics in the Northeast. Poverty concentration among these groups does not reflect a tendency for upper-status minority members to live apart from the poor but an interaction between changes in the distributional structure ov income and patterns of racial/ethnic segregation. The occurence of rising poverty under conditions of high racial/ethnic segregation explains the growing spatial isolation of poor blacks and hispanic in U.S. urban society.
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