Farrell Chad R, Firebaugh Glenn
Department of Sociology, University of Alaska Anchorage, USA.
Department of Sociology, Pennsylvania State University, USA.
Soc Sci Res. 2016 May;57:161-76. doi: 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2016.01.001. Epub 2016 Jan 28.
We investigate suburbanization and neighborhood inequality among 14 immigrant groups using census tract data from the 2008-2012 American Community Survey. Immigrant neighborhood inequality is defined here as the degree to which immigrants reside in neighborhoods that are poorer than the neighborhoods in which native whites reside. Using city and suburb Gini coefficients which reflect the distributions of groups across neighborhoods with varying poverty rates, we find that the immigrant-white gap is attenuated in the suburbs. This finding applies to most of the nativity groups and remains after accounting for metropolitan context, the segregation of poverty, and group-specific segregation levels, poverty rates, and acculturation characteristics. Despite reduced neighborhood inequality in the suburbs, large group differences persist. A few immigrant groups achieve residential parity or better vis-à-vis suburban whites while others experience high levels of neighborhood inequality and receive marginal residential returns on suburban location.
我们利用2008 - 2012年美国社区调查的普查区数据,对14个移民群体的郊区化和邻里不平等进行了调查。这里将移民邻里不平等定义为移民居住在比本地白人居住的社区更贫困的社区的程度。使用反映不同贫困率社区中群体分布情况的城市和郊区基尼系数,我们发现移民与白人之间的差距在郊区有所缩小。这一发现适用于大多数出生地群体,并且在考虑了大都市背景、贫困隔离以及特定群体的隔离水平、贫困率和文化适应特征之后仍然成立。尽管郊区的邻里不平等有所减少,但群体之间的巨大差异依然存在。一些移民群体在与郊区白人的居住平等方面达到或超过了水平,而另一些群体则经历了高度的邻里不平等,并且在郊区居住所获得的居住回报微薄。