View Single Post
  #28  
Old 05-11-2007, 01:53 PM
ChipWrecked ChipWrecked is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: \"You been drinkin\', Santa?\"
Posts: 6,311
Default Re: Ramblings of a drunk (confederate soldier protesters included) tl;

[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
Um, OK. Atlanta proper is majority black. Except for what, Buckhead, VA Highlands? Midtown? Where the only black people are cleaning white people's houses. How many black folks you see living north of 285?

dbag out.

[/ QUOTE ]

lol, are you kidding? Tons. I've grown up here and lived here for 25 years. I've lived or worked in almost every part of the city and surrounding suburbs.

black N of 285? ummm, they're everywhere.

[/ QUOTE ]


Link



THE BUILDING BLOCKS OF ATLANTA: RACIAL RESIDENTIAL SEGREGATION AND NEIGHBORHOOD INEQUITY by MELISSA M. HAYES Under the Direction of Robert Adelman ABSTRACT I conduct a case study of Atlanta's metropolitan core in order to provide a rich, detailed analysis of urban neighborhoods, and to document the persistence of racial inequalities. Using Census 2000 block group data, I examine racial residential segregation in the five core counties of Atlanta between whites and minority groups, as well as among minority groups. I find high levels of residential segregation between whites and blacks, as well as between blacks and Asians, and blacks and Hispanics; segregation is lower between whites and Asians, and whites and Hispanics. I also investigate neighborhood characteristics like percentage poverty and educational attainment in neighborhoods with different racial compositions. These results highlight the advantages found in predominately white neighborhoods compared to racially concentrated minority neighborhoods, particularly African American and Latino neighborhoods. Overall, this thesis shows that residential stratification remains a hallmark indicator of racial inequality through the opening of the twenty-first century in Atlanta.


[censored] please.
Reply With Quote