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Still the Promised City?: African-Americans and New Immigrants in Postindustrial New York
 
 
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Still the Promised City?: African-Americans and New Immigrants in Postindustrial New York [Paperback]

Roger Waldinger (Author)
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Book Description

0674000722 978-0674000728 November 15, 1999

Still the Promised City? addresses the question of why African-Americans have fared so poorly in securing unskilled jobs in the postwar era and why new immigrants have done so well. Does the increase in immigration bear some responsibility for the failure of more blacks to rise, for their disappearance from many occupations, and for their failure to establish a presence in business?

The two most popular explanations for the condition of blacks invoke the decline of manufacturing in New York and other major American cities: one claims that this decline has closed off job opportunities for blacks that were available for earlier immigrants who lacked skills and education; the other emphasizes "globalization"--the movement of manufacturing jobs offshore to areas with lower labor costs. But Roger Waldinger shows that these explanations do not fit the facts. Instead, he points out that a previously overlooked factor--population change--and the rapid exodus of white New Yorkers created vacancies for minority workers up and down the job ladder. Ethnic succession generated openings both in declining industries, where the outward seepage of whites outpaced the rate of job erosion, and in growth industries, where whites poured out of bottom-level positions even as demand for low-level workers increased. But this process yielded few dividends for blacks, who saw their share of the many low-skilled jobs steadily decline. Instead, advantage went to the immigrants, who exploited these opportunities by expanding their economic base.

Waldinger explains these disturbing facts by viewing employment as a queuing process, with the good jobs at the top of the job ladder and the poor ones at the bottom. As economic growth pulls the topmost ethnic group up the ladder, lower-ranking groups seize the chance to fill the niches left vacant. Immigrants, remembering conditions in the societies they just left, are eager to take up the lower-level jobs that natives will no longer do. By contrast, African-Americans, who came to the city a generation ago, have job aspirations similar to those of whites. But the niches they have carved out, primarily in the public sector, require skills that the least educated members of their community do not have. Black networks no longer provide connections to the lower-level jobs, and relative to the newcomers, employers find unskilled blacks to be much less satisfactory recruits. The result is that a certain number of well-educated blacks have good middle-class jobs, but many of the less educated have fallen back into an underclass. Grim as this analysis is, it points to a deeper understanding of America's most serious social problem and offers fresh approaches to attacking it.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

A devastating refutation of the mismatch thesis, which assumes that the decline of manufacturing jobs has doomed inner-city blacks.
--Fred Siegel (Wall Street Journal )

Waldinger avoids facile generalizations about immigrants taking jobs that poor Americans (read African Americans) 'ought' to have...[He] offers tough (though not jargon-ridden) sociological analysis.
--Edward Countryman (Washington Post Book World )

A pathbreaking empirical and theoretical contribution. Using incredibly nuanced empirical evidence, Waldinger describes and explains the tendency for groups to develop and to maintain job concentrations. He then assesses the impact of this finding on a wide range of theories about group disadvantage...All this is done with a minimum of jargon and a maximum of clarity, making for a volume that should be required reading for anyone interested in immigration.
--Suzanne Model (Contemporary Sociology )

In his deeply informed, penetrating analysis of race and work in New York's twentieth-century political economy, Roger Waldinger quickly takes issue with two prevailing paradigms. The first of these contends that the city's new service and information economies have no place for unlettered, unskilled minorities (the mismatch theory); the second argues that the proliferation of managerial and professional workers requires an enormous support cast of 'service' employees, of which minorities are an inordinate percentage (the world cities approach). Such arguments, Waldinger claims, create deus ex machina which miss the social paths through which people gain jobs or not...Waldinger's analysis is among the best-informed and sophisticated contemporary analysis of race and work in a twentieth-century metropolis that I have read. By privileging historical evidence above a universalistic theory, his conclusions that ethnic niches will sustain the animosities over work that have discoloured New York's past. His is not an optimistic opinion, but it is exceptionally well-grounded. This books will be of compelling interest to students of race relations in any city beyond New York, particularly, I think, London, the midland cities, and Cape Town.
--Graham Russelll Hodges (Ethnic and Racial Studies [UK] )

From the Back Cover

A devastating refutation of the mismatch thesis, which assumes that the decline of manufacturing jobs has doomed inner-city blacks.-Fred Siegel, Wall Street Journal

Product Details

  • Paperback: 384 pages
  • Publisher: Harvard University Press (November 15, 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0674000722
  • ISBN-13: 978-0674000728
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.1 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #74,804 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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4.0 out of 5 stars Good Example of Competition Model, September 29, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Still the Promised City?: African-Americans and New Immigrants in Postindustrial New York (Paperback)
This is a good example of the competition model for race relations. But, it could go further into the analysis of broader patterns of discrimination in the marketplace.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
mismatch proponents, new ethnic division, hiring queue, employed persons aged, ethnic niche, mayoral agencies, labor queue, other outsider groups, white ethnic workers, immigrant niche, black contractors, factory sector, black niche, sheetmetal workers, ethnic economy, job erosion, ethnic employment, one union official, niche formation, ethnic succession, black employment, mismatch hypothesis, intercensal period, municipal jobs, white contractor
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, United States, Census of Population, World War, West Indian, Puerto Rican, Fire Department, Los Angeles, Hong Kong, Dominican Republic, Hart-Celler Act, New Deal, Tammany Hall, Department of Labor, Police Department, Eastern Europe, Finance Department, New Jersey, Shift Figure, Welfare Department, Employed Mean, Mean Public, Middle East, Wall Street, Washington Heights
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