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Moving out when minorities move in
The term white flight refers to a more specific phenomenon than white suburbanization, exurbanization or migration, and it was never intended to subsume these much broader movements of the white population. White flight alludes to the out-movement of whites that can ensue once blacks or other minori...
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Published in: | American Demographics 2002-06, Vol.24 (6), p.23 |
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description | The term white flight refers to a more specific phenomenon than white suburbanization, exurbanization or migration, and it was never intended to subsume these much broader movements of the white population. White flight alludes to the out-movement of whites that can ensue once blacks or other minority populations exceed a threshold percentage of the population in a neighborhood or locality. It thus refers to a response by whites to the influx of minority populations into predominantly or exclusively white areas, and to the tendency of whites to leave many of those areas more quickly than comparable locales not experiencing such an influx. |
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source | EBSCOhost Business Source Ultimate; Social Science Premium Collection; ABI/INFORM Global |
subjects | African Americans Censuses College professors Demographics Metropolitan areas Minority & ethnic groups Neighborhoods Population Rural urban migration Segregation Sociology Statistical data Suburban areas White people |
title | Moving out when minorities move in |
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