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Erschienen in: Demography 1/2016

01.12.2015

A Middle Ground? Residential Mobility and Attainment of Mixed-Race Couples

verfasst von: Ryan Gabriel

Erschienen in: Demography | Ausgabe 1/2016

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Abstract

Marriage and cohabitation between members of different racial and ethnic groups has increased in the United States over recent decades. Despite this demographic shift, we know relatively little about how the growing numbers of mixed-race couples are faring in systems of residential stratification. Previous research indicates that mixed-race couples tend to be located in diverse neighborhoods, but because this past research has used cross-sectional data and has not focused on actual residential mobility, it is not clear whether mixed-race couples choose diverse neighborhoods or are just more likely to develop in diverse neighborhoods. To provide a more complete picture of this topic, I conduct a prospective analysis of the residential location and mobility patterns of mixed-race couples, focusing on the extent to which these couples are more likely than monoracial couples to move into, and/or remain in, diverse neighborhoods. The use of longitudinal data between 1985 and 2009 from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID) linked to neighborhood- and metropolitan-level data from multiple population censuses reveals that in comparison with monoracial couples, mixed-race couples tend to be located in neighborhoods with higher levels of racial and ethnic diversity and tend to enter more diverse residential destinations when they move. However, these outcomes vary substantially across types of mixed-race couples. Moreover, the outcomes associated with individual- and metropolitan-level conditions provide limited support for the common contention that the residential patterns of mixed-race couples reflect differences in residential preferences, and point to the role of broader patterns of racial stratification in shaping their residential outcomes.

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Fußnoten
1
Individuals are included in the analysis only during observation periods in which they are a member of a couple. Members of couples that dissolve during the study period are dropped from the analysis for remaining years, returning only if they form another union. Supplemental analysis using a Heckman correction (inverse Mills ratio) for the selection of individuals into couple status produces results that are quite similar to those presented here. Nevertheless, given that this analysis focuses on couples, caution should be exercised in extrapolating the results to residential outcomes for individuals not in couples.
 
3
Values for intercensal years are assumed to fall on a straight line between values for endpoints defined by the most recent past and future decennial censuses.
 
4
Individuals are included in the analysis only for years in which they completed a PSID interview. In rare cases in which a respondent left the sample and then returned at a later date, observations for both periods are included in the analysis.
 
5
The “other” category includes individuals self-identifying as Asian, Native American, and other.
 
6
According to the 2010 U.S. Census, 97.3 % of all mixed-race couples contain a black or a white partner (U.S. Census Bureau 2010).
 
7
Despite efforts to enhance the representativeness of the PSID by adding Latino and immigrant subsamples, these groups are still underrepresented numerically and do not represent the broader populations of these groups.
 
8
The racial groups used to compose the entropy score are white, black, Latino, and other.
 
9
Models are estimated using the gllamm and xt suite commands in Stata 13 (StataCorp 2013).
 
10
There is too little clustering of PSID respondents within census tracts to justify the analysis of an additional level of hierarchy.
 
11
Supplemental analyses controlling for a wide range of other neighborhood characteristics—including the local poverty rate, labor force participation rate, percentage of adults with a college education, median housing values, and housing vacancy rates—had no impact on the observed group differences in the reaction to neighborhood diversity.
 
12
When the reference category is black-black couples, only the interaction for black-Latino couples and neighborhood entropy is positive (b = 1.798) and significant (p < .05), meaning that as neighborhood entropy increases, black-Latino couples have a higher likelihood of out-mobility than black-black couples.
 
13
Supplementary analyses find that group differences in homeownership are the main source of group differences in residential mobility and the interaction between couple-groups and neighborhood entropy.
 
14
Supplemental models estimating polynomials of both neighborhood and metropolitan entropy provide little indication of nonlinear effects of either neighborhood or metropolitan diversity, and the inclusion of these squared terms does not alter the substantive findings from the main models.
 
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Metadaten
Titel
A Middle Ground? Residential Mobility and Attainment of Mixed-Race Couples
verfasst von
Ryan Gabriel
Publikationsdatum
01.12.2015
Verlag
Springer US
Erschienen in
Demography / Ausgabe 1/2016
Print ISSN: 0070-3370
Elektronische ISSN: 1533-7790
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s13524-015-0445-7

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