The segregation of Chicago is pretty stark, but Dayton is pretty similar.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.
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:
Labels:
National politics,
US history
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment