cover image: The Black Suburban Sort: Is Suburbanization Diversifying Blacks’ Racial Attitudes?

20.500.12592/1j68oph

The Black Suburban Sort: Is Suburbanization Diversifying Blacks’ Racial Attitudes?

1 Sep 2024

The recent expansion in Black suburbanization is the most substantial shift in Black American residential patterns since the Great Migration. It has left Blacks more sorted between urban and suburban neighborhoods across metropolitan areas. This study explores whether this increasing residential stratification is associated with differentiation in Blacks’ political views on racialized issues. I first lay out a theory of Black political sorting by place, specifying processes inherent in suburbanization that could lead to opinion stratification between suburban and urban Blacks. This is followed by a descriptive analysis of American Voices Project interviews with suburban and urban Black respondents. The data show Black suburbanization is neither as economically transformative nor politically differentiating as might be expected. Despite subtle opinion differences between suburban and urban respondents, they mostly converge in their bleak assessments of racialized issues.
race black lives matter policing neighborhood violence black political attitudes black suburbanization

Authors

Reuel Rogers

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7758/RSF.2024.10.4.06
ISBN
2377-8253 2377-8261
Pages
33
Published in
United States of America
Rights
© 2024 Russell Sage Foundation. Rogers, Reuel. 2024. “The Black Suburban Sort: Is Suburbanization Diversifying Blacks’ Racial Attitudes?” RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences 10(4): 120–52. https://doi.org/10.7758/RSF.2024.10.4.06. I am grateful to the American Voices Project and Russell Sage Foundation for granting access to the dataset, the American Voices Project staff who collected the data, and the respondents who shared their life experiences and views. I also thank the participants in the RSF Building an Open Qualitative Social Science Symposium, Kathryn Edin, David Grusky, Charles Varner, and the anonymous reviewers for their helpful feedback on an earlier version of the manuscript. Finally, I owe a debt of gratitude to Noah Blaisdell, Josh Ezrol, Chelsea Lu, Sarah Thorngate, Tamara Ulalisa, Daniel Wright, and the Farrell Fellows Program at Northwestern University for research support. Direct correspondence to: Reuel Rogers

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