Great Recession Foreclosures Fueled Racial Segregation, Finds Report

The housing crisis reportedly moved whites out of integrated neighborhoods and moved more black and Latino families in

2015/5/6-The widespread homeĀ foreclosuresĀ that devastated families at the height of the Great Recession also exacerbated racial segregation in communities across the United States, according to a new study.

Racial segregation between Latinos and whites grew by almost 50 percent and segregation between blacks and whites grew by about 20 percent as a result of families either moving in or abandoning areas hit hard by home repossession, researchers estimated.

The gap was fueled by white families leaving homes in ethnically integrated neighborhoodsĀ hit hard by foreclosures, while blacks and Latinos moved into those neighborhoods, seeking affordable housing, according to the report, titled ā€œNeighborhood Foreclosures, Racial/Ethnic Transitions, and Residential Segregation.ā€

ā€œAmong its many impacts, theĀ foreclosure crisisĀ has partly derailed progress in achieving racial integration in American cities,ā€ said the demographer who led the study, Matthew Hall, an assistant professor of policy and management at Cornellā€™s College of Human Ecology.

The exact cause of the white exodus from integrated neighborhoods and the destination of those families remained uncertain in the findings.

It is unclear whether ā€œwhite population loss from diverse neighborhoods is due to white foreclosed households moving to whiter neighborhoods or to other white households living in these [integrated] neighborhoods fleeing in the face of growing neighborhood distress,ā€ the report says.

The report also found that black and Latino families were more heavily burdened by the housing crisis than their white neighbors. Foreclosures were reportedly much more likely among non-white than white households. Foreclosure rates were, overall, three times higher in predominantly black and Latino neighborhoods than predominantly white neighborhoods.

The trends revealed by the report show that white families were ā€œbetter able than black and Latino families to shield themselves from the social and economic distress often accompanying high concentrations of foreclosure,ā€ the report says.

The Cornell University study, set to appear in the American Sociological Review in June, combed through demographic data from nearly all home foreclosures in the U.S. between 2005 and 2009.

About 9 million U.S. families lost their homes during the housing crisis.

 

Source: Al JazeeraĀ 

Al Jazeera Staff

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