Changing the geography of opportunity by expanding residential choice: Lessons from the Gautreaux program
- 1 January 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Housing Policy Debate
- Vol. 6 (1), 231-269
- https://doi.org/10.1080/10511482.1995.9521186
Abstract
The concept of “geography of opportunity” suggests that where individuals live affects their opportunities. While multivariate analyses cannot control completely for individual self‐selection to neighborhoods, this article examines a residential integration program—the Gautreaux program—in which low‐income blacks are randomly assigned to middle‐income white suburbs or low‐income mostly black urban areas. Compared with urban movers, adult suburban movers experience higher employment but no different wages or hours worked, and suburban mover youth do better on several educational measures and, if not in college, are more likely to have jobs with good pay and benefits. The two groups of youth are equally likely to interact with peers, but suburban movers are much more likely to interact with whites and only slightly less likely to interact with blacks. The article considers how attrition might affect the observations and speculates about the program's strengths and pitfalls.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- The geography of metropolitan opportunity: A reconnaissance and conceptual frameworkHousing Policy Debate, 1995
- Inner‐city concentrated poverty and neighborhood distress: 1970 to 1990Housing Policy Debate, 1993
- The Education and Employment of Low-Income Black Youth in White SuburbsEducational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 1992
- Survey-Based Experiments on White Racial Attitudes Toward Residential IntegrationAmerican Journal of Sociology, 1988
- White suburban schools' responses to low-income black children: Sources of successes and problemsThe Urban Review, 1988
- Trends in the Residential Segregation of Blacks, Hispanics, and Asians: 1970-1980American Sociological Review, 1987
- Barriers to the Racial Integration of Neighborhoods: The Detroit CaseThe Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 1979
- Voluntary Racial Integration in a Magnet SchoolThe School Review, 1978
- School DesegregationPublished by Springer Nature ,1975