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Metropolitan Fragmentation and Suburban Ghettos: Some Empirical Observations on Institutional Racism
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Citations
22
References
1991
Year
Suburban GhettosInstitutional RacismEducationRacial DisparitiesRacial Segregation StudiesSocial SciencesRaceContemporary RacismUrban SocietyBlack SuburbsAfrican American StudiesUrban PoliticsRacial EquityPublic PolicyUrban PolicyRacial JusticeUrban GeographyCommunity DevelopmentConsolidated GovernmentMetropolitan FragmentationSociologyUrban EconomicsUrban Social JusticeBlack NeighborhoodsUrban Public Service
ABSTRACT:Are citizens in predominantly black neighborhoods or communities better off with public services provided by a consolidated government where blacks are in the minority than when they control municipal government in an autonomous suburban setting? This paper reports using a comparison group design to investigate four hypotheses: that blacks in predominantly black suburbs in a fragmented environment (1) enjoy more services, (2) evidence lower dissatisfaction with services, (3) are less disaffected, and (4) participate more than minorities in a consolidated government. Contrary to public choice expectations, the findings indicate substantial evidence for traditional reformers' beliefs in the advantages of consolidated government.
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