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Essay / Housing segregation and minority groups in the United States...
Housing segregation is taken for granted in every aspect of urban life in the United States (Squires, Friedman and Siadat, 2001). It is the denial of equal access to housing to minority groups, particularly African Americans, through misinterpretation, that deprives people of color of financial services and the opportunity to afford decent accommodation. Caucasians generally live in areas with predominantly white communities. However, African Americans most likely live in racially mixed areas with African Americans and Hispanics. A communication problem between landowners and failure to give African American groups an accurate description of available housing in a decent area. This book focuses on various concepts related to housing segregation and minority groups living apart from the majority group. The downgrading of African Americans in some neighborhoods continues today. The expression of a disinterested neighborhood, followed by change in the urban community and minority disruption, made it difficult for African Americans to get out there, have equity, and try to get themselves. install in a residential area. If they have a reason to move, Caucasians who support open housing laws but become uncomfortable and move if they come into contact with an increase in the African-American population in their own neighborhood, most likely settle in the neighborhoods to which they were transferred. This movement creates a huge increase in the African American community and then the change in the urban community begins an alternative. All of these slightly biased procedures leave the metropolitan African-American population with few options. This forces them to stay in non-advanced neighborhoods with rising crime, gang activity, and... middle of paper... uh, it's declining. Since the 1960s, progress has been made toward racial segregation in housing. However, the problem of racial discrimination remains a significant factor in determining current instances of social and economic inequality. Despite everything, it seems that injustice continues to affect today's share of opportunities. Even though there are laws and agencies that are supposed to prohibit these types of questions, they still exist and are hidden from federal and state minds. The article supports the reality that minorities are unfairly treated based on the works cited Farley, JE (2012). Living Apart: Housing Segregation in America. In JE Farley, Majority-Minority Relations, 6th edition (pp. 310-342). Pearson. Squires, G.D., Friedman, S., & Siadat, C. (2001). Residential Segregation in the United States: Does Race Matter? Cambridge, Massachusetts.