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- W2076182451 abstract "LACK geographic segregation is, at least in part, a manifestation of a continuing aversion to blacks on the part of whites (Bobo, Schuman, and Steeh 1986). The measurement of segregation is problematic owing to the many facets of the concept (Stearns and Logan 1986). Nevertheless, most studies conclude that segregation, however it may be measured, has not decreased notably in metropolitan areas (for instance, Massey and Denton 1987). The persistence of residential segregation stands as an indictment of nearly forty years of civil rights policy. The federal courts and the Congress of the United States have been engaged in an ongoing formulation of policy designed to limit racial discrimination. Governmental attempts to open opportunities to blacks have produced notable successes in employment, voting, and education. In spite of repeated initiatives in the area of housing, however, few places in the metropolis can be said to be stably integrated (Massey and Mullan 1984; Berry and associates 1976). An important element of the general argument of this paper is the contention that many whites prefer not to live near residential concentrations of blacks. There is, therefore, a continuing interest on the part of whites to find residences that do not expose them to blacks. We argue that public policy has been able to redirect this interest, but not to thwart it. Civil rights policy has substantially dismantled neighborhood level, or intra-jurisdictional, mechanisms of segregation. But federal court policy has reinforced devices which support inter-jurisdictional racial segregation. If neighborhood level segregative mechanisms are removed while municipal level segregative mechanisms are left intact, municipal borders should gradually become racial and class borders as well. A change in patterns of segregation of" @default.
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- W2076182451 date "1989-12-01" @default.
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- W2076182451 title "Public Policy and Patterns of Residential Segregation" @default.
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- W2076182451 doi "https://doi.org/10.1177/106591298904200412" @default.
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