Publication | Closed Access
Residential Segregation and Ethnic Identification among Hispanics in Texas
29
Citations
20
References
1988
Year
EthnicityEthnic Minority GroupsEducationEthnic Group RelationRacial Segregation StudiesEthnic IdentificationSocial SciencesRaceTexas CitiesAfrican American StudiesRacial GroupStatisticsEthnic DiscriminationRacial EquityHousingRacial JusticeEthnic IdentityResidential DevelopmentSociologyDemography
The hypothesis that racial or ethnic minority groups that are residentially segregated from the majority group in a racially or ethnically mixed society are less likely to be assimilated than those who are residentially integrated is empirically assessed. Data are used from the 1980 census of population for 139 Texas cities with large Hispanic populations. The results do not provide support for the hypothesis; rather, they suggest that other ecological context factors and social structural factors are the key determinants of ethnic identification.
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