1997
DOI: 10.1177/107808749703200603
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The Disparate Racial Neighborhood Impacts of Metropolitan Economic Restructuring

Abstract: The authors examine the relationship between economic restructuring in a metropolitan statistical area (MSA) and 1980-1990 changes in poverty rates in its census tracts. A summary indicator of economic restructuring, encompassing changes in employment/population ratios, shares of manufacturing employment, and shares of MSA manufacturing in a tract's county, is developed to explain why MSA restructuring is particularly distressing for blacks. Most poverty growth in predominantly black census tracts occurred in … Show more

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Cited by 37 publications
(27 citation statements)
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“…The first empirical works to probe this disparate spatial impact proposition rigorously were the related studies by Galster and Mincy (1993) and Galster, Mincy and Tobin (1997), which examined decadal changes in census tract poverty rates between 1980 and 1990 across all U.S. metropolitan areas. They stratified tracts by dominant racial group to assess how a variety of metro-wide economic forces may have affected the strata differentially.…”
Section: The Urban Geography Of Disparate Impacts: Prior Scholarshipmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The first empirical works to probe this disparate spatial impact proposition rigorously were the related studies by Galster and Mincy (1993) and Galster, Mincy and Tobin (1997), which examined decadal changes in census tract poverty rates between 1980 and 1990 across all U.S. metropolitan areas. They stratified tracts by dominant racial group to assess how a variety of metro-wide economic forces may have affected the strata differentially.…”
Section: The Urban Geography Of Disparate Impacts: Prior Scholarshipmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition, as manufacturing shifts from cities to suburbs, from north to south, and from the United States to other countries, the importance of TRI may decline in older center cities. Furthermore, to the extent that economic restructuring has disproportionately affected Black communities and inner cities (22,23), it may lessen TRIbased disparities. Other studies have only examined potential disparate impacts in single states or regions defined by the U.S. EPA.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The authors of these studies argue that international-trade imports and the relocation of higher paying jobs to suburbia leave lower-paying service jobs to city residents, causing more real estate defaults (Squires, 1994;Wilson, 1987Wilson, , 1996Galster et al, 1997). Still other studies emphasize the role of racial profiling used by real estate agents, banks and other lenders as contributing to delinquencies (Massey and Denton, 1993;Farley et al, 1994;South and Crowder, 1997).…”
Section: Do Demographic and Sociological Factors Have An Impact On Nementioning
confidence: 94%