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Metropolitan influences on migration into poor and nonpoor neighborhoods
Authors:South Scott J  Pais Jeremy  Crowder Kyle
Affiliation:a Department of Sociology and Center for Social and Demographic Analysis, University at Albany, State University of New York, Albany, NY 12222, USA
b Department of Sociology and Carolina Population Center, University of North Carolina—Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, USA
Abstract:Data from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics and three decennial US censuses are used to examine the influence of metropolitan-area characteristics on black and white households’ propensity to move into poor versus nonpoor neighborhoods. We find that a nontrivial portion of the variance in the odds of moving to a poor rather to a nonpoor neighborhood exists between metropolitan areas. Net of established individual-level predictors of inter-neighborhood migration, black and white households are more likely to move to a poor or extremely poor tract rather than to a nonpoor tract in metropolitan areas containing many poor neighborhoods and a paucity of recently-built housing in nonpoor areas. Blacks are especially likely to move to a poor tract in metropolitan areas characterized by high levels of racial residential segregation and in which poor tracts have a sizeable concentration of blacks. White households are more likely to move to a poor than to a nonpoor tract in metropolitan areas that have comparatively few African Americans.
Keywords:Neighborhood   Migration   Geographic mobility   Poverty   Race   Metropolitan area
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