Diverging trajectories of neighborhood disadvantage by race and birth cohort from childhood through young adulthood.

Prior research has established the greater exposure of African Americans from all income groups to disadvantaged environments compared to whites, but the traditional focus in studies of neighborhood stratification obscures heterogeneity within racial/ethnic groups in residential attainment over time...

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Main Authors: Jennifer Candipan, Robert J Sampson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2023-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0283641
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author Jennifer Candipan
Robert J Sampson
author_facet Jennifer Candipan
Robert J Sampson
author_sort Jennifer Candipan
collection DOAJ
description Prior research has established the greater exposure of African Americans from all income groups to disadvantaged environments compared to whites, but the traditional focus in studies of neighborhood stratification obscures heterogeneity within racial/ethnic groups in residential attainment over time. Also obscured are the moderating influences of broader social changes on the life-course and the experiences of Latinos, a large and growing presence in American cities. We address these issues by examining group-based trajectory models of residential neighborhood disadvantage among white, Black, and Latino individuals in a multi-cohort longitudinal research design of over 1,000 children from Chicago as they transitioned to adulthood over the last quarter century. We find considerable temporal consistency among white individuals compared to dynamic heterogeneity among nonwhite individuals in exposure to residential disadvantage, especially Black individuals and those born in the 1980s compared to the 1990s. Racial and cohort differences are not accounted for by early-life characteristics that predict long-term attainment. Inequalities by race in trajectories of neighborhood disadvantage are thus at once more stable and more dynamic than previous research suggests, and they are modified by broader social changes. These findings offer insights on the changing pathways by which neighborhood racial inequality is produced.
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spelling doaj.art-016b214e4f9646eab8367e26849538b62023-05-10T05:32:12ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032023-01-01184e028364110.1371/journal.pone.0283641Diverging trajectories of neighborhood disadvantage by race and birth cohort from childhood through young adulthood.Jennifer CandipanRobert J SampsonPrior research has established the greater exposure of African Americans from all income groups to disadvantaged environments compared to whites, but the traditional focus in studies of neighborhood stratification obscures heterogeneity within racial/ethnic groups in residential attainment over time. Also obscured are the moderating influences of broader social changes on the life-course and the experiences of Latinos, a large and growing presence in American cities. We address these issues by examining group-based trajectory models of residential neighborhood disadvantage among white, Black, and Latino individuals in a multi-cohort longitudinal research design of over 1,000 children from Chicago as they transitioned to adulthood over the last quarter century. We find considerable temporal consistency among white individuals compared to dynamic heterogeneity among nonwhite individuals in exposure to residential disadvantage, especially Black individuals and those born in the 1980s compared to the 1990s. Racial and cohort differences are not accounted for by early-life characteristics that predict long-term attainment. Inequalities by race in trajectories of neighborhood disadvantage are thus at once more stable and more dynamic than previous research suggests, and they are modified by broader social changes. These findings offer insights on the changing pathways by which neighborhood racial inequality is produced.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0283641
spellingShingle Jennifer Candipan
Robert J Sampson
Diverging trajectories of neighborhood disadvantage by race and birth cohort from childhood through young adulthood.
PLoS ONE
title Diverging trajectories of neighborhood disadvantage by race and birth cohort from childhood through young adulthood.
title_full Diverging trajectories of neighborhood disadvantage by race and birth cohort from childhood through young adulthood.
title_fullStr Diverging trajectories of neighborhood disadvantage by race and birth cohort from childhood through young adulthood.
title_full_unstemmed Diverging trajectories of neighborhood disadvantage by race and birth cohort from childhood through young adulthood.
title_short Diverging trajectories of neighborhood disadvantage by race and birth cohort from childhood through young adulthood.
title_sort diverging trajectories of neighborhood disadvantage by race and birth cohort from childhood through young adulthood
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0283641
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