Saturday, February 12, 2011

Segregated Chicago

An interesting article by Steve Bogira in the Chicago Reader (h/t Dish) discussing segregation in Chicago and wondering why it hasn't been a topic of discussion in the mayor's race contains this informative graphic and write-up:
But most African-Americans are clustered in two areas, as they were in the 1960s: a massive one on the south side, and a smaller one on the far west side. The south-side section, between Western Avenue and the lake, stretches more than a hundred blocks north to south, from 35th Street to the city limits at 138th. This African-American subdivision of Chicago includes 18 contiguous community areas, each with black populations above 90 percent, most of them well above that. The west-side black section includes another three contiguous 90 percent-plus community areas. Fifty-five percent of Chicago's 964,000 African-Americans live in these 21 community areas, in which the aggregate population is 96 percent black. Two-thirds of the city's blacks live in community areas that are at least 80 percent black.
The segregation of Chicago is pretty stark, but Dayton is pretty similar.

No comments:

Post a Comment