Entry:

Farley, Reynolds; Bianchi, Suzanne; and Colasanto, Diane, "Barriers to the Racial Integration of Neighborhoods: The Detroit Case," Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 441 (January, 1979), 97-113.


Abstract:

Real estate sales and lending policies, rather than residents' attitudes, are now the main causes of residential segregation. Most whites are quite willing to accept racially mixed neighborhoods, and blacks overwhelmingly prefer mixed neighborhoods, except when they are the first blacks in a previously all-white neighborhood.

GSS Years:

1972

Other Data Sets:

DAS 1976; Annual Housing Survey, 1974

GSS Codebook Variables referenced by document:

Variable Name

Variable Label

 
 
RACOBJCT

NEIGHBORHOOD INTEGRATED BY SAME SES