Neighborhood and Life Chances : : How Place Matters in Modern America / / ed. by Harriet B. Newburger, Susan M. Wachter, Eugenie L. Birch.

Does the place where you lived as a child affect your health as an adult? To what degree does your neighbor's success influence your own potential? The importance of place is increasingly recognized in urban research as an important variable in understanding individual and household outcomes. P...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Title is part of eBook package: De Gruyter Penn Press eBook Package Complete Collection
HerausgeberIn:
MitwirkendeR:
Place / Publishing House:Philadelphia : : University of Pennsylvania Press, , [2011]
©2011
Year of Publication:2011
Language:English
Series:The City in the Twenty-First Century
Online Access:
Physical Description:1 online resource (392 p.) :; 34 illus.
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Other title:Frontmatter --
Contents --
Abbreviations --
Preface --
Part I. People and Places: Heath, Education, and Safety --
Chapter 1. Health and Residential Location --
Chapter 2. The Place of Race in Health Disparities: How Family Background and Neighborhood Conditions in Childhood Impact Later-Life Health --
Chapter 3. Educational Interventions: Their Effects on the Achievement of Poor Children --
Chapter 4. Before or After the Bell? School Context and Neighborhood Effects on Student Achievement --
Chapter 5. Neighborhoods, Social Interactions, and Crime: What Does the Evidence Show? --
Chapter 6. Daily Activities and Violence in Community Landscapes --
Part II. Geographies of Opportunity --
Chapter 7. Exploring Changes in Low-Income Neighborhoods in the 1990s --
Chapter 8. Reinventing Older Communities Through Mixed-Income Development: What Are We Learning from Chicago's Public Housing Transformation? --
Chapter 9. Reinventing Older Communities: Does Place Matter? --
Part III. Moving People Out of Poverty --
Chapter 10. An Overview of Moving to Opportunity: A Random Assignment Housing Mobility Study in Five U.S. Cities --
Chapter 11. How Does Leaving High-Poverty Neighborhoods Affect the Employment Prospects of Low-Income Mothers and Youth? Evidence from the Moving to Opportunity Experiment --
Chapter 12. Teens, Mental Health, and Moving to Opportunity --
Chapter 13. Changing the Geography of Opportunity by Helping Poor Households Move Out of Concentrated Poverty: Neighborhood Effects and Policy Design --
Part IV. Segregation: The Power of Place --
Chapter 14. Are Mixed Neighborhoods Always Unstable? Two-Sided and One-Sided Tipping --
Chapter 15. Preferences for Hispanic Neighborhoods --
Chapter 16. Increasing Diversity and the Future of U.S. Housing Segregation --
Chapter 17. Understanding Racial Segregation: What Is Known About the Effect of Housing Discrimination? --
Notes --
Bibliography --
List of Contributors --
Index --
Acknowledgments
Summary:Does the place where you lived as a child affect your health as an adult? To what degree does your neighbor's success influence your own potential? The importance of place is increasingly recognized in urban research as an important variable in understanding individual and household outcomes. Place matters in education, physical health, crime, violence, housing, family income, mental health, and discrimination-issues that determine the quality of life, especially among low-income residents of urban areas.Neighborhood and Life Chances: How Place Matters in Modern America brings together researchers from a range of disciplines to present the findings of studies in the fields of education, health, and housing. The results are intriguing and surprising, particularly the debate over Moving to Opportunity, an experiment conducted by the Department of Housing and Urban Development, designed to test directly the effects of relocating individuals away from areas of concentrated poverty. Its results, while strong in some respects, showed very different outcomes for boys and girls, with girls more likely than boys to experience positive outcomes. Reviews of the literature in education and health, supplemented by new research, demonstrate that the problems associated with residing in a negative environment are indisputable, but also suggest the directions in which solutions may lie.The essays collected in this volume give readers a clear sense of the magnitude of contemporary challenges in metropolitan America and of the role that place plays in reinforcing them. Although the contributors suggest many practical immediate interventions, they also recognize the vital importance of continued long-term efforts to rectify place-based limitations on lifetime opportunities.
Format:Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
ISBN:9780812200089
9783110413458
9783110413618
9783110459548
DOI:10.9783/9780812200089
Access:restricted access
Hierarchical level:Monograph
Statement of Responsibility: ed. by Harriet B. Newburger, Susan M. Wachter, Eugenie L. Birch.