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The Paradoxes of Integration电子书

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作       者:J. Eric Oliver

出  版  社:University of Chicago Press

出版时间:2010-05-15

字       数:35.4万

所属分类: 进口书 > 外文原版书 > 文学/自传/回忆录

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Tali Mendelberg and Janelle . In 1999, while at Princeton University, Tali and I started talking about race and social environments. At the time I was writing about how suburban social contexts influence civic participation, and she suggested it might be interesting to examine their impact on racial attitudes. This piqued my interest, and, working together, we published a paper examining how economic and racial contexts shaped whites' racial attitudes. A year later, while at Yale University, Janelle and I began to wonder if these same effects might be evident among minority populations as well. As an undergraduate at UCLA, Janelle had worked as a researcher on the Multi-City Study of Urban Inequality (MCSUI) and told me the data might be a great source for testing some hypotheses about interminority attitudes. Working together, we later published a paper using the Los Angeles portion of the MCSUI study. I am greatly indebted to both Tali and Janelle for helping me first engage this difficult topic and work through many core issues in this analysis.
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Acknowledgments

Introduction: Place and the Future of American Race Relations

CHAPTER ONE Why Place Is So Important for Race

CHAPTER TWO Racial Attitudes among Whites, Blacks, Latinos, and Asian Americans

CHAPTER THREE Neighborhood- and Metropolitan-Level Differences in Racial Attitudes

CHAPTER FOUR Geographic Self-Sorting and Racial Attitudes

CHAPTER FIVE Interracial Civic and Social Contact in Multiethnic America

CHAPTER SIX The Civic and Social Paradoxes of Neighborhood Racial Integration

CHAPTER SEVEN On Segregation and Multiculturalism

Appendix A: Data Sources

References

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