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Reexamining the ethnic hierarchy of locational attainment: Evidence from Los Angeles
Authors:David A. Cort
Affiliation:Department of Sociology, W37A Machmer Hall, University of Massachusetts-Amherst, Amherst, MA 01003, United States
Abstract:Because of a lack of data, the locational attainment literature has not incorporated documentation status into models examining group differences in neighborhood quality. I fill this void by using the Los Angeles Family and Neighborhood Survey, which permits the identification of undocumented respondents, allowing a reexamination of the ethnic structure of locational attainment in this important immigrant-receiving city. Results first suggest that while undocumented Latinos live in the poorest quality communities, blacks live in neighborhoods that are similar to native-born Latinos and better than foreign-born Asians and Latinos. Second, the effects of education are strongest for blacks, allowing the highly educated an opportunity to reside in communities that are of better quality than educated Latinos and Asians. Thus, undocumented Latinos replace blacks at the bottom of the locational attainment hierarchy, allowing educated blacks in Los Angeles to reside in better neighborhoods than blacks in the nation at large.
Keywords:Locational attainment   Segregation   Spatial assimilation   Documentation status
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