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The Housing Divide: How Generations of Immigrants Fare in New York's Housing Market
 
 
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The Housing Divide: How Generations of Immigrants Fare in New York's Housing Market [Hardcover]

Emily Rosenbaum (Author), Samantha Friedman (Author)

Price: $45.00 & this item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping. Details
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Book Description

December 1, 2006 081477590X 978-0814775905

The Housing Divide examines the generational patterns in New York City's housing market and neighborhoods along the lines of race and ethnicity. The book provides an in-depth analysis of many immigrant groups in New York, especially providing an understanding of the opportunities and discriminatory practices at work from one generation to the next. Through a careful read of such factors as home ownership, housing quality, and neighborhood rates of crime, welfare enrollment, teenage pregnancy, and educational achievement, Emily Rosenbaum and Samantha Friedman provide a detailed portrait of neighborhood life and socio-economic status for the immigrants of New York.

The book paints an important, if disturbing, picture. The authors argue that not only are Blacks—regardless of generation—disadvantaged relative to members of other racial/ethnic groups in their ability to obtain housing in high-quality neighborhoods, but that housing and neighborhood conditions actually decline over generations. Rosenbaum and Friedman's findings suggest that the future of racial inequality in this country will increasingly isolate Blacks from all other groups. In other words, the “color line” may be shifting from a line separating Blacks from Whites to one separating Blacks from all non-Blacks.


Frequently Bought Together

Customers buy this book with Qualitative Research: A Guide to Design and Implementation (JOSSEY-BASS HIGHER & ADULT EDUCATION SERIES) $29.88

The Housing Divide: How Generations of Immigrants Fare in New York's Housing Market + Qualitative Research: A Guide to Design and Implementation (JOSSEY-BASS HIGHER & ADULT EDUCATION SERIES)


Editorial Reviews

Review

“Casts much light on longstanding debates over the assimilation and economic advancement of foreign immigrants in the USA.”
-Society

,

"The Housing Divide is a very good book. It accomplishes the admirable feat of evaluating assimilation theory, using a combination of archival and quantitative data, within the intrinsically important New York city context."
-Milton Vickerman,Urban Studies Journal



“Well organized, tightly written and full of interesting and provocative information. The authors produced a very good piece of scholarship that is theoretically grounded and attentive to detail, especially concerning methodological issues including the potential limitations of their study.”
-Victoria Basolo,University of California, Irvine



“This well written book makes a major contribution to urban sociology and race/ethnic studies.”
-Choice

,

“[W]ill be fascinating for policy makers and scholars concerned with housing patterns and racial discrimination.”
-Jewish Book World

,

About the Author

Emily Rosenbaum is professor of sociology at Fordham University.



Samantha Friedman is assistant professor of sociology at Northeastern University.


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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
place stratification theory, subarea percentage, spatial assimilation theory, locational attainment, place stratification model, surrounding subarea, spatial assimilation model, socioeconomic credentials, segmented assimilation theory, neighborhood outcomes, locational outcomes, residential outcomes, underperforming students, dual housing market, generational decline, residential circumstances, neighborhood conditions, generational patterns, time since arrival, lower wards, stratification processes, housing searches, generational status, deteriorated housing, generation rises
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, United States, Puerto Ricans, African Americans, Patterns of Locational Attainment, Lower East Side, West Indian, Five Points, World War, Soviet Union, East Harlem, Hong Kong, Soviet Jews, Old Chinatown, Sunset Park, Appendix Table, Washington Heights, West Indies, Eastern European Jews, Whites Blacks Hispanics Race, Puerto Rico, Hart-Celler Act, Predictor Own Crowded, Fair Housing Act, South American
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Front Cover | Table of Contents | First Pages | Index | Surprise Me!
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