Social Forces
Volume 78, Issue 3, 2000, Pages 989-1015
"Narrow and filthy alleys of the city"?: The residential settlement patterns of black southern migrants to the north (Article)
Tolnay S.E.* ,
Crowder K.D. ,
Adelman R.M.
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a
State University of New York, Albany, NY, United States, Department of Sociology, University at Albany-SUNY, Albany, NY 12222, United States
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b
[Affiliation not available]
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c
State University of New York, Albany, NY, United States
Abstract
Considerable effort has been devoted to understanding the social, economic, and cultural forces that produced the Great Migration and to describing the success of southern African American migrants upon their arrival in the North. In contrast, relatively little research has examined the settlement patterns of southern migrants. This article uses the 1970 Neighborhood Characteristics Public Use Microdata Sample to determine whether migrants were more likely than northern-born blacks to reside in neighborhoods that (1) were more highly segregated, (2) had more families living in poverty, and (3) were characterized by higher levels of family instability. The results reveal that, on average, recent migrants from the South resided in the "best" neighborhoods, that past migrants were located in the "worst" neighborhoods, and that northern-born blacks fell between the two migrant groups. Recent migrants also received the greatest locational returns to human capital characteristics such as education and employment.
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Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-0034147515&doi=10.1093%2fsf%2f78.3.989&partnerID=40&md5=052ab3e09c859bd4e7cf8eb9eecc0863
DOI: 10.1093/sf/78.3.989
ISSN: 00377732
Cited by: 20
Original Language: English