Ethnic Segregation in Cities

Ethnic Segregation in Cities

Ethnic Segregation in Cities

Ethnic Segregation in Cities

eBook

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Overview

First published in 1981, Ethnic Segregation in Cities argues that race and ethnicity are fundamental to writing about the city, and that economic patterns adapt themselves to race and ethnicity rather than vice versa. The problem of ethnic segregation is a burning one for both geographers and sociologists – geographers because of the concern for all aspects of urban deprivation, and sociologists because they are discovering that space and spatial processes are important factors in influencing social segregation or assimilation. The book brings together some of the main contributors to the literature on spatial aspects of ethnicity from both sides of the Atlantic. A variety of evidence from New York, Detroit, Bradford and Blackburn address the question of whether choice on the path of ethnic members, or constraints imposed by the host society are determinant factors influencing residential segregation. This book will be of interest to students of sociology, human geography and urban studies.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781000914252
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 07/31/2023
Series: Routledge Revivals
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 260
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Ceri Peach, Vaughan Robinson and Susan Smith

Table of Contents

Acknowledgement Introduction 1. Urban Segregation and Inner City Policy in Great Britain 2. Ethnic Segregation: Social Reality and Academic Myth 3. An Asymmetrical Approach to Segregation 4. A Demographic Perspective on School Desegregation in the USA 5. Paradoxes of Puerto Rican Segregation in New York 6. The Black Professional and Residential Segregation in the American City 7. The Development of South Asian Settlement in Britain and the Myth of Return 8. Business Development and Self-segregation: Asian Enterprise in Three British Cities 9. Ethnic Segregation and Ethnic Intermarriage: A Re-examination of Kennedy’s Triple Melting Pot in New Haven, 1900-1950 10. Social Status, the Market and Ethnic Segregation 11. Ethnic Residential Segregation, Ethnic Mixing and Resource Conflict: A Study in Belfast, Northern Ireland Notes on Contributors Index

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