Full Citation
Title: Racial and Ethnic Inequality in the United States: A Secular Perspective
Citation Type: Conference Paper
Publication Year: 1997
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Abstract: Part of a special issue on the 109th annual meeting of the American Economic Association presents one of a series of articles on African-American economic gains. Decennial censuses from 1880, 1900, 1910, 1980, and 1990 are employed to gain a longitudinal picture of the dynamics of ethnic/racial-group economic performance. Two tables list Duncan socioeconomic index occupational status scores and literacy/high school diploma attainment rates for various ethnic groups in the five censuses. A further table lists the findings of an analysis conducted to determine whether differences in these average group characteristics explain all of the intergroup disparity reflected in average measures of occupational status. It is concluded that there is a long and sustained tradition of a racially differentiated structure of opportunity in the U.S.
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Authors: Guilkey, David K.; Darity, William A.; Dietrich, Jason
Conference Name: 109th Meeting of the American Economic Association
Publisher Location: New Orleans, LA
Data Collections: IPUMS USA
Topics: Other, Race and Ethnicity
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