2017
DOI: 10.1111/grow.12214
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Race, Place, and the Persisting Income Divide in the U.S. Southeast, 2000–2014

Abstract: Despite economic growth since the recession, the gap between the richest and the poorest segments of the population remains one of the most pressing concerns of contemporary America. This paper uses IR‐95/20, IR‐80/20, and IR‐65/35 ratios to measure the income divides between the richest and the poorest segments in the mid‐to‐large‐sized metropolises of the U.S. Southeast, their variation across ethnicities, and their association with metropolitan level attributes such as diversity, segregation, socio‐economic… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…These patterns corroborate other prior research-with higher poverty in counties with relatively higher shares of diversity (largely blacks and Hispanics) and, as indicated by the Census reports, in random counties of reservations (Native Americans) [56][57][58]. The historical contexts of slavery and plantation economies and long decades of racial/ethnic discrimination, without doubt, have manifested into clusters of racialized poverty, and female-headed poverty shows up accordingly.…”
Section: Visual Analysis Of Major Variables: Gendered Poverty and Wor...supporting
confidence: 88%
“…These patterns corroborate other prior research-with higher poverty in counties with relatively higher shares of diversity (largely blacks and Hispanics) and, as indicated by the Census reports, in random counties of reservations (Native Americans) [56][57][58]. The historical contexts of slavery and plantation economies and long decades of racial/ethnic discrimination, without doubt, have manifested into clusters of racialized poverty, and female-headed poverty shows up accordingly.…”
Section: Visual Analysis Of Major Variables: Gendered Poverty and Wor...supporting
confidence: 88%
“…These elements of social and spatial differences are largely attributable to the widening socioeconomic gaps among recently arriving Korean immigrants. Such elements of a growing income divide within‐groups was also noted in Sharma's () analyses of 102 metropolises of the U.S. Southeast, and in her (Sharma ) intraurban analyses of race versus class divide among Hispanics in Milwaukee and African‐Americans in Columbus.…”
Section: Discussion Conclusion and Policy Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 99%