White Out
Why integrating Americaās neighborhoods and cities is harder than we think.Ā
2015/5/15-Thereās no question that white Americans prefer white neighborhoods. As I noted inĀ a Wednesday column, ā20 percent of whites said their ideal neighborhood was all white ā¦ [a]nd only 25 percent of white respondents said they would live in a neighborhood where one-half of their neighbors were black.ā
At the same time, this polling doesnāt tell usĀ why. I implied prejudice, but there are other options. It could be ethnocentrismāpositive feelings about your racial compatriots. Or it could be a class difference, where whites avoid black neighborsāand black neighborhoodsāout of real or perceived differences in the quality of homes, schools, services, and amenities. And if so, thereās a related question: Do blacks act similarly, avoiding black or significantly black neighborhoods for the same reason?
Because of our egalitarian norms and the real wealth and income differences between blacks and whites, itās easy to conclude that white preference for white neighborhoods is a kind of class discrimination, which we can fix through active, interventionist policy. But in this situation, the answer we might want isnāt the one thatās true. For white homebuyers, race matters, and not just as a proxy for class.
The main vehicles for this finding are a series of experiments from Maria Krysan, a sociologist at the University of Illinois at Chicago. In more than a decadeās worth of studies, Krysan and her collaborators have looked at the relationships among neighborhood desirability, class, and race, drawing from surveys and interviews with whites, blacks, and other groups.
In one experimentĀ Krysan and her researchers developed 13 videos showing five neighborhoods of different social class levels: lower working class, upper working class, blemished middle class, unblemished middle class, and upper middle class. Participants would infer the wealth and income of neighborhoods in the short videos by aesthetic qualities: the size of the lots, the conditions of the homes, and so on. A blemished middle-class neighborhood would have homes with overgrown yards and boarded-up garages, while an unblemished one would have neither.
In addition to class characteristics, Krysan also added people. For four of the five neighborhoodsāthe fifth was empty, as a controlāresearchers made three variations. Each one had a different racial composition. In one version of the upper-middle-class video, the residents were white. In another they were black. And in another there was a mix. They would wear the same kinds of clothes and do the same kinds of activities. In private, participants would watch the videosāwith random assignments for the racial compositionāand then rate them in terms of home costs, property upkeep, safety, future property values, and school quality.
For all participants, white and black, class mattered. The wealthier the neighborhoodāas inferred by characteristicsāthe higher the rank. But for whites race was a major influence. āWhites who saw an all-White neighborhood ranked the neighborhood significantly more positively than Whites who saw the identical neighborhood with all Black residents,ā writes Krysan. And in turn mixed neighborhoods had higher ratings than black ones but lower ratings than the all-white alternatives. This was true in every neighborhood across every dimension other than property upkeep. If whites saw blacks in the unblemished middle-class neighborhood, for example, they assumed more crime and worse schools than if it were all-white. (Indeed,Ā a 2001 study from sociologists Lincoln Quillian and Devah PagerĀ found that reports of crime and disorder increase with the proportion of black residents in a neighborhood even after you control for the actual levels of crime and disorder.)
An earlier experimentĀ using real-life citiesĀ had similar results. Researchers asked respondents in four metropolitan areasāAtlanta, Boston, Detroit, and Los Angelesāto rate 23 communities of different incomes, social characteristics, and racial compositions. Again, class matters, but so does race. With more blacks came a lower rating, even when the neighborhood was prosperous.
As for ethnocentrism?Ā In a study of whites who flee, Krysan found that negative stereotypesāand not pro-white feelingsāwere the āstrongest predictor of white-flight attitudes.ā The more people believe that blacks will bring crime and poverty, the more likely they are to leave when black families arrive.
Race matters for blacks too, just in different ways. Blacks arenāt averse to black neighbors.Ā In another similar video experiment, blacks gave their highest ratings to mixed-race neighborhoods, followed by black neighborhoods, and ending with white ones. Fear shaped these feelings. For all-black neighborhoods it was fear of official neglect from authorities and elected officials. For all-white ones it was fear of discrimination and unfair treatment from neighbors and others. And while Latinos arenāt the focus in this work,Ā other research finds thatĀ āwhites prefer living with Latinos over African Americans ā¦ [and] Latinos prefer neighborhoods with both a significant proportion of Latinos and whites,ā although they prefer integration into all-white areas to integration with black Americans.
What does this all mean? As it stands,segregation is still the rule. And whites in particular live in mostly white neighborhoods, with little if any movement into significantly or even predominantly black areas. If this preference is a proxy for classāif whites donāt oppose blackneighbors, just the conditions of blackneighborhoodsāthen integration becomes an easier task: Improve mixed-race and predominantly black neighborhoodsāenhancing schools and servicesāand you attract white buyers, increasing diversity and breaking down our walls of separation.
But to a good degree, this preference is prejudiceāa function of anti-black stigma. In which case greater integrationāand greater racial equalityāis even further away than it looks.
Source: Slate