Racial and Ethnic Residential Segregation Across the United States : : New Approaches to Understanding Trends and Patterns.
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Superior document: | The Springer Series on Demographic Methods and Population Analysis Series ; v.54 |
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TeilnehmendeR: | |
Place / Publishing House: | Cham : : Springer International Publishing AG,, 2023. Ã2023. |
Year of Publication: | 2023 |
Edition: | 1st ed. |
Language: | English |
Series: | The Springer Series on Demographic Methods and Population Analysis Series
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Online Access: | |
Physical Description: | 1 online resource (260 pages) |
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Table of Contents:
- Intro
- Preface
- Abstract
- Contents
- Chapter 1: Introduction
- 1.1 Overview
- 1.2 Brief Note on Measurement and Implications for Future Research
- 1.3 The Continuing Relevance of Residential Segregation
- 1.4 Theories of Segregation
- 1.5 Segregation as a Multilevel Process
- 1.6 Chapter Overview
- 1.7 Final Thoughts: Why This Book Now?
- References
- Chapter 2: Measurement and Study Design
- 2.1 Overview
- 2.2 What Is Residential Segregation and What Motivates Us to Study It?
- 2.3 Preliminary Comments on Index Choice
- 2.4 Details of Study Design
- 2.4.1 Measuring Segregation in Metropolitan Areas, Micropolitan Areas, and Noncore Counties
- 2.4.2 Coverage Spanning Three Decades
- 2.4.3 Group Comparisons
- 2.4.4 Combinations of Group Comparisons Across Communities and Time
- 2.4.5 Sources of Data and Microunits
- 2.4.6 Spatial Units for Assessing Segregation Within Communities
- 2.5 Segregation Index Bias: Overview, Background, and Solutions
- 2.5.1 A Somewhat Technical Review of the Origins of Index Bias
- 2.5.2 The Simple Refinement to Index Calculations that Yields Unbiased Index Scores
- 2.6 Households as the Microunits for Measuring Segregation
- 2.6.1 Methodological Implications of Using Data for Households Versus Using Data for Persons
- 2.6.2 Difficulty of Correcting Index Bias When Using Data for Persons
- 2.7 Contrasting the Dissimilarity Index and the Separation Index for Measuring Segregation
- 2.7.1 Segregation as Stratification and the Resonance of the Separation Index
- 2.7.2 Making Sense of D-S Combinations
- 2.7.3 Examining Empirical Examples of Selected D-S Combinations
- 2.7.4 Dissimilarity, Separation, and Isolation Indices
- 2.7.5 Further Comments to Guide Interpretations of Values for Dissimilarity and Separation Indices
- 2.8 Summary and Overview
- References.
- Chapter 3: National Trends in Racial and Ethnic Residential Segregation
- 3.1 Overview
- 3.2 Previously Observed Trends in White-Black, White-Latino, and White-Asian Segregation
- 3.3 The Historical Context of Segregation
- 3.4 Data
- 3.5 Measurement
- 3.6 Trends and Patterns of Racial and Ethnic Residential Segregation, 1990-2010
- 3.6.1 White-Black Segregation
- 3.6.2 White-Latino Segregation
- 3.6.3 White-Asian Segregation
- 3.6.4 Segregation Between Minoritized Racial Groups
- 3.6.5 Where Is Segregation Rising? Where Is It Declining?
- 3.7 Community-Level Analysis of Segregation Patterns
- 3.7.1 Aggregate-Level Predictors Not Considered
- 3.8 Consequences of Index Choice for Understanding Trends in Segregation
- 3.9 Summary
- References
- Chapter 4: Racial and Ethnic Residential Segregation in Nonmetropolitan Communities
- 4.1 Overview
- 4.2 Challenges for Nonmetropolitan Residential Segregation Research
- 4.3 Segregation in Nonmetropolitan Communities: What We Know, and What We Question
- 4.4 The Choice of Segregation Index for Nonmetropolitan Segregation Research
- 4.5 Debates Over Meaningfulness of Residential Segregation in Nonmetropolitan Communities
- 4.6 Data
- 4.7 Measurement and Approach
- 4.7.1 Summary of Methodological Approach
- 4.8 Changing Demographics of Nonmetropolitan Communities
- 4.9 Overall Trends in Nonmetropolitan Residential Segregation
- 4.10 Diverging Measures of Segregation and Patterns of Uneven Distribution
- 4.11 Case Studies: Areas with Dispersed Unevenness Versus Prototypical Segregation
- 4.12 Summary
- References
- Chapter 5: Latino and Asian Segregation in New Destinations
- 5.1 Overview
- 5.2 New Destinations: An Overview of Changes and Potential Trajectories
- 5.3 Residential Segregation Studies of New Destinations: Findings and Limitations
- 5.4 Data and Measurement.
- 5.5 Residential Segregation in Latino New Destinations and Established Areas of Settlement
- 5.6 Residential Segregation in Asian New Destinations and Established Areas of Settlement
- 5.7 Residential Segregation in Black New Destinations and Established Areas of Settlement
- 5.8 Understanding Segregation Patterns Across New Destinations and Established Areas of Settlement
- 5.9 Differences in Segregation Measurement When Studying New Destinations
- 5.9.1 Myth or Fact: Low Minoritized Group Size Necessarily Leads to Low Values for the Separation Index
- 5.10 Findings for Dispersed and Polarized Unevenness in New Destinations
- 5.11 Highlighting Measurement Issues: The Case of Worthington, Minnesota
- 5.12 Summary
- References
- Chapter 6: The Micro-Level Dynamics of Racial and Ethnic Residential Segregation
- 6.1 Overview
- 6.2 Review of Theoretical Frameworks
- 6.3 Framing Cross-context Segregation Patterns
- 6.4 Previous Research in Locational Attainments Analysis and Segregation
- 6.5 Data
- 6.6 Sample
- 6.7 Analysis Design
- 6.8 Profile Standardization
- 6.8.1 Locational Attainment Analysis of Segregation
- 6.9 Standardization and Decomposition Analysis
- 6.10 Locational Attainments Across High- and Low-Segregation Contexts
- 6.11 Estimating Segregation by Socioeconomic Status with Standardization Analysis
- 6.12 Summary
- References
- Chapter 7: Conclusions
- 7.1 Summary of Purpose and Intended Contributions
- 7.2 Establishing Continuity with Past Research
- 7.3 Empirical Developments from the Present Work
- 7.4 Methodological Developments
- 7.5 Future Directions for Residential Segregation Research
- References.