Zubrinsky CL, Bobo L
Soc Sci Res. 1996 Dec;25(4):335-74. doi: 10.1006/ssre.1996.0016.
Most major urban areas remain segregated by race, especially in terms of black segregation from whites. We replicate and extend the innovative approach developed by Farley and colleagues for understanding processes of racial residential segregation with data collected in Los Angeles. Using a large (N = 4025) multiracial sample of adults, we examine (1) actual and perceived differences in economic status, (2) mutual preference for same race neighbors, and (3) racial prejudice and discrimination as hypotheses for the persistence of residential segregation. With a systematic experimental design we gauge respondent openness to living in areas with varying proportions of black, white, Latino, or Asian neighbors. We find no support for actual or perceived cost of housing as a barrier to integration. Although all groups exhibit some degree of ethnocentric preference for same race neighbors, this tendency is strongest among whites rather than blacks and plays only a small role in perpetuating segregation. Blacks face the greatest hostility in the search for housing and are consensually recognized as most likely to face discrimination in the housing market. Racial minorities are more open to sharing residential space with whites than with other minorities. We find generally higher rates of openness to integration than Farley and colleagues found in their recent Detroit survey.
大多数主要城市地区仍然存在种族隔离现象,尤其是黑人与白人之间的隔离。我们采用法利及其同事所开发的创新方法,并运用在洛杉矶收集的数据,对其进行复制和拓展,以理解种族居住隔离的过程。我们利用一个规模较大(N = 4025)的多族裔成年人样本,检验了以下几点:(1)经济状况的实际差异和感知差异;(2)对同种族邻居的相互偏好;(3)种族偏见和歧视,以此作为居住隔离持续存在的假设。通过系统的实验设计,我们衡量了受访者对于居住在有不同比例黑人、白人、拉丁裔或亚裔邻居区域的接受程度。我们发现,住房的实际成本或感知成本并不是整合的障碍。尽管所有群体都表现出一定程度的对同种族邻居的族群中心主义偏好,但这种倾向在白人中最为强烈,而非黑人,并且在维持隔离方面只起到很小的作用。黑人在寻找住房时面临最大的敌意,并且大家一致认为黑人在住房市场中最容易面临歧视。少数族裔与白人共享居住空间的意愿高于与其他少数族裔。我们发现,总体而言,与法利及其同事最近在底特律调查中发现的情况相比,人们对整合的接受程度更高。