Fifteen years later: can residential mobility programs provide a long-term escape from neighborhood segregation, crime, and poverty?

Fifteen years later: can residential mobility programs provide a long-term escape from neighborhood segregation, crime, and poverty?

We examined whether the Gautreaux residential mobility program, which moved poor black volunteer families who were living in inner-city Chicago into more-affluent and integrated neighborhoods, produced long-run improvements in the neighborhood environments of the participants. We found that although all the participants moved in the 6 to 22 years since their initial placements, they continued to reside in neighborhoods with income levels that matched those of their placement neighborhoods. Families who were placed in higher-income, mostly white neighborhoods were currently living in the most-affluent neighborhoods. Families who were placed in lower-crime and suburban locations were most likely to reside in low-crime neighborhoods years later.

Micere Keels, Greg J. Duncan, Ruby Mendenahll, and James E. Rosenblaum

Demography

February 2005

I didn't find this helpful.This was helpful. Please let us know if you found this article helpful.
Loading...
By |2019-04-12T07:33:47-07:00January 1st, 2018|Affordability, Inequality, Land Use Regulation, Reference|