Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
Max Lu (2002)
‘Are pastures greener?’ Residential consequences of migrationInternational Journal of Population Geography, 8
, Gregory D
, Smith D
(1995)
Closed Doors, Opportunities Lost: The Continuing Costs of Discrimination
E. Fong, Kumiko Shibuya (2000)
Suburbanization and Home Ownership: The Spatial Assimilation Process in U.S. Metropolitan AreasSociological Perspectives, 43
1993
Sociology and the Race Problem: The Failure of Perspective
T. Sugrue (1995)
Crabgrass-Roots Politics: Race, Rights, and the Reaction against Liberalism in the Urban North, 1940–1964The Journal of American History, 82
, , Friedman S
and2001
R. Alba, J. Logan (1993)
Minority Proximity to Whites in Suburbs: An Individual-Level Analysis of SegregationAmerican Journal of Sociology, 98
J
1987
J. Hartigan (1997)
Green Ghettos and the white underclassSocial Research, 64
C. Nagel (2002)
Geopolitics by another name: immigration and the politics of assimilationPolitical Geography, 21
, Logan J
, Stults B
(1993)
Home Rules: Some Reflections on Racism and Nationalism in Everyday Life
, , Denton N
and1993
Natalie Cherot, Martin Murray (2002)
Postmodern UrbanismUrban Affairs Review, 37
P. Marcuse (1989)
‘Dual city’: a muddy metaphor for a quartered cityInternational Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 13
G. Sabagh, Mehdi Bozorgmehr (1986)
Are the Characterisitcs of Exiles Different from Immigrants? The Case of Iranians in Los Angeles
1997a
“Locating White Detroit,”in R
A. Amin (2002)
Ethnicity and the Multicultural City: Living with DiversityEnvironment and Planning A, 34
L. Karsten (1998)
Growing Up in Amsterdam: Differentiation and Segregation in Children's Daily LivesUrban Studies, 35
E
1952
M
1964
, , Sassler S
and2000
R. Alba, J. Logan, Brian Stults, G. Marzán, Wenquan Zhang (1999)
Immigrant Groups in the Suburbs: A Reexamination of Suburbanization and Spatial AssimilationAmerican Sociological Review, 64
Russell Kazal (1995)
Revisiting assimilation: The rise, fall, and reappraisal of a concept in American ethnic historyThe American Historical Review, 100
J. Allen, E. Turner (1996)
Spatial Patterns of Immigrant AssimilationThe Professional Geographer, 48
Min Zhou (1997)
Segmented Assimilation: Issues, Controversies, and Recent Research on the New Second Generation 1International Migration Review, 31
(2000)
White Paper, Black Marks: Architecture, Race
B. Hooks (1990)
Yearning: Race, Gender, and Cultural Politics
C. Philo, H. Parr, Nicola Burns (2004)
Geographies of exclusion.Mental health today
A. Portes, R. Rumbaut (1990)
Immigrant America: A Portrait
A. Bonnett (1998)
Who was white? The disappearance of non-European white identities and the formation of European racial whitenessEthnic and Racial Studies, 21
K. Dunn (1998)
Rethinking Ethnic Concentration: The Case of Cabramatta, SydneyUrban Studies, 35
A. Learmonth, R. Johnston (1983)
The Dictionary of Human GeographyThe Geographical Journal, 149
J. Logan, R. Alba, Wenquan Zhang (2002)
Immigrant Enclaves and Ethnic Communities in New York and Los AngelesAmerican Sociological Review, 67
A
V
1998
“Occupational Gender Segregation: Index Measurement and Econometric Modeling,” Demography 35(4),489–496
Jeffrey Timberlake (2002)
Separate, But How Unequal? Ethnic Residential Stratification, 1980 to 1990City & Community, 1
A. Portes (1997)
Immigration Theory for a New Century: Some Problems and Opportunities 1International Migration Review, 31
R. Harris, Robert Lewis (1998)
Constructing a Fault(y) Zone: Misrepresentations of American Cities and Suburbs, 1900–1950Annals of The Association of American Geographers, 88
E. Fong, Rima Wilkes (1999)
The Spatial Assimilation Model Reexamined: An Assessment by Canadian Data 1International Migration Review, 33
, , Rumbaut R
and1996
J. Higham (1955)
Strangers in the land
1985
“Ethnic Residential Segregation: A Theoretical and Empirical Synthesis,” Sociology and Social Research 69(3),315–350
M. White, A. Biddlecom, Shenyang Guo (1993)
Immigration, Naturalization, and Residential Assimilation among Asian Americans in 1980Social Forces, 72
L. Freeman (2002)
Does Spatial Assimilation Work for Black Immigrants in the US?Urban Studies, 39
H. Bauder (2002)
Neighbourhood Effects and Cultural ExclusionUrban Studies, 39
D. Massey (1985)
Ethnic Residential Segregation : A Theoretical Synthesis and Empirical ReviewSociology and social research, 69
(2003)
Racial Whiteness,” Ethnic and Racial Studies
R. Alba, J. Logan, Brian Stults (2000)
The changing neighborhood contexts of the immigrant metropolisSocial Forces, 79
D. Delaney (2002)
The Space That Race MakesThe Professional Geographer, 54
(1993)
The Center for Urban Policy Research
A. Bonnett, Anoop Nayak (2003)
Cultural Geographies of Racialization - the Territory of Race
Rogers Brubaker (2001)
The return of assimilation? Changing perspectives on immigration and its sequels in France, Germany, and the United StatesEthnic and Racial Studies, 24
Barbara Zoloth (1976)
Alternative Measures of School SegregationLand Economics, 52
Abraham Hoffman (1996)
THE POLITICS OF DIVERSITY: Immigration, Resistance, and Change in Monterey Park, California John HortonSouthern California quarterly, 78
D. Fang, David Brown (1999)
Geographic Mobility of the Foreign-Born Chinese in Large Metropolises, 1985–1990 1International Migration Review, 33
M. Ellis, Rosalind Wright (1998)
When Immigrants Are Not Migrants: Counting Arrivals of the Foreign Born Using the U.S. Census 1International Migration Review, 32
C. Nagel (2002)
Constructing difference and sameness: the politics of assimilation in London's Arab communitiesEthnic and Racial Studies, 25
P. Gober, M. Behr (1982)
Central Cities and Suburbs as Distinct Place Types: Myth or Fact?Economic Geography, 58
R. Park (1954)
Human communities: the city and human ecology, 2
P. Gramberg (1998)
School Segregation: The Case of AmsterdamUrban Studies, 35
C. Peach (1996)
Does Britain Have GhettosTransactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 21
Charles Cortese (1976)
Further Consideration on the Methodological Analysis of Segregation Indices.American Sociological Review, 41
(1952)
Paper presented at the Annual Conference of the Association of American Geographers
(2000)
“ The Rack and the Web : The Other City , ”
M. Barron, M. Gordon (1964)
Assimilation in American Life: The Role of Race, Religion, and National Origins.American Sociological Review, 29
Robert Adelman, Hui-shien Tsao, S. Tolnay, K. Crowder (2001)
Neighborhood Disadvantage Among Racial and Ethnic Groups: Residential Location in 1970 and 1980The Sociological Quarterly, 42
M. Waters (1999)
Black Identities: West Indian Immigrant Dreams and American Realities
C. Peach (1997)
PLURALIST AND ASSIMILATIONIST MODELS OF ETHNIC SETTLEMENT IN LONDON 1991Tijdschrift voor economische en sociale geografie, 88
(2000)
“ Residential Segregation in Los Angeles , ”
A. Portes, Min Zhou (1993)
The New Second Generation: Segmented Assimilation and its VariantsThe ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 530
(2003)
Segregation Model,” Demography
K. Pettit (2003)
Concentrated Poverty: A Change in Course
2002
“Spatially Segmented Assimilation within the Metropolis: Evidence from the 1990 Census,” Paper presented at the Annual Conference of the Association of American Geographers, Los Angeles , LA
M. Dear (2002)
Los Angeles and the Chicago School: Invitation to a DebateCity & Community, 1
F. Dieleman (1996)
Households and Housing: Choice and Outcomes in the Housing Market
A. Kobayashi, Linda Peake (2000)
Racism out of Place: Thoughts on Whiteness and an Antiracist Geography in the New MillenniumAnnals of the Association of American Geographers, 90
John Horton, Jose Calderon (1995)
The Politics of Diversity: Immigration, Resistance, and Change in Monterey Park, California
Bernard Watson, W. Wilson (1988)
The Truly Disadvantaged: The Inner City, The Underclass, and Public Policy.Journal of Negro Education, 57
T
,, Pettit L
J. Logan, R. Alba, Shu-yin Leung (1996)
Minority Access to White Suburbs: A Multiregional ComparisonSocial Forces, 74
G. Galster, Kurt Metzger, R. Waite (1999)
Neighborhood Opportunity Structures of Immigrant Populations, 1980 and 1990Housing Policy Debate, 10
S. Musterd, M. Winter (1998)
Conditions for spatial segregation: some European perspectivesInternational Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 22
R. Frankenberg, Rebecca Aanerud, T. Muraleedharan, Angie Chabram-Dernersesian, B. Hooks (1997)
Displacing Whiteness: Essays in Social and Cultural Criticism
1997b
“Green Ghettos and the White Underclass,” Social Research 64(2),339–365
, Alba R
, Zhang W
Wei Li (1998)
Anatomy of a New Ethnic Settlement: The Chinese Ethnoburb in Los AngelesUrban Studies, 35
Mehdi Bozorgmehr (1997)
Internal Ethnicity: Iranians in Los AngelesSociological Perspectives, 40
E. Fong (1997)
A Systemic Approach to Racial Residential PatternsSocial Science Research, 26
R. Rumbaut (1997)
Assimilation and its Discontents: Between Rhetoric and Reality 1International Migration Review, 31
, , Bozorgmehr M
and1987
R. Alba, V. Nee (1997)
Rethinking Assimilation Theory for a New Era of Immigration 1International Migration Review, 31
R. Harris, Robert Lewis (1998)
HOW THE PAST MATTERS: North American Cities in the Twentieth CenturyJournal of Urban Affairs, 20
Jonathan Smith, D. Sibley (1995)
Geographies of Exclusion
Kathleen Batalden (2005)
Immigrants and the American DreamThe Professional Geographer, 57
M. White, Sharon Sassler (2000)
Judging not only by color : Ethnicity, nativity, and neighborhood attainmentSocial Science Quarterly, 81
Abstract This paper works through some of the epistemological and methodological consequences of an unreflexive use of white suburbs as the expected residential destination in U.S. spatial assimilation research. Foregrounding immigrant suburbanization in spatial assimilation occludes alternative geographic trajectories; simply put, spatial diffusion need not be central city to suburban decentralization. More problematically, spatial assimilation research often translates residential movement to the suburbs into increasing proximity with whites. This results in the degree of segregation from whites becoming the standard by which immigrant assimilative progress is gauged. Building on critical whiteness studies and recent research on aspatial assimilation, we develop some new theoretical entry points into the process of spatial assimilation. We treat metropolitan areas as constellations of neighborhoods rather than a central city–suburban doughnut and become circumspect in our use of whites as a referent category. Our investigation of spaces of assimilation in greater Los Angeles reveals that established immigrants are more dispersed residentially than recent conational arrivals, although the effect varies by group. For many immigrant groups, these dispersions from concentrations of initial settlement do not reduce segregation from whites. Segregation lessens over time, however, between immigrants and other native‐born Americans. For many groups, but by no means all, a dispersed residential pattern is associated with higher quality neighborhoods.
City and Community – SAGE
Published: Jun 1, 2004
Read and print from thousands of top scholarly journals.
Already have an account? Log in
Bookmark this article. You can see your Bookmarks on your DeepDyve Library.
To save an article, log in first, or sign up for a DeepDyve account if you don’t already have one.
Copy and paste the desired citation format or use the link below to download a file formatted for EndNote
Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
All DeepDyve websites use cookies to improve your online experience. They were placed on your computer when you launched this website. You can change your cookie settings through your browser.