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Tegeler, Philip; Herskind, Micah – Poverty & Race Research Action Council, 2018
School and neighborhood segregation are recognized as pernicious and persistent problems across the United States, originally developed through intentional government policies, and perpetuated today by both public policy and private markets that have adapted to segregated systems of housing, education, and transportation. Housing and school…
Descriptors: Neighborhoods, School Segregation, Housing, Social Influences
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Felner, Jennifer K.; Dyette, Omar; Dudley, Terry; Farr, Amanda; Horn, Stacey – Journal of LGBT Youth, 2022
LGBTQ-supportive youth programs provide access to critical resources and social support in identity-affirming environments. In Chicago, Illinois, an informal network of LGTBQ-supportive youth programs in the city's white, middle-class, gay enclave, Boystown, draws predominately low-income youth of color from across the city who seek emergency…
Descriptors: LGBTQ People, Social Support Groups, Youth Programs, Young Adults
Rudert, Eileen; And Others – 1995
In February 1991 the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights began a long-term study of the factors contributing to increased racial and ethnic tensions in the United States. This document is a report on one aspect of this study, a hearing held to consider the factors underlying increased racial and ethnic tension in Chicago (Illinois). This hearing was…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Economic Factors, Equal Opportunities (Jobs), Ethnic Relations
Rubinowitz, Leonard S.; Rosenbaum, James E. – 2000
In 1976, thousands of low-income African Americans, mostly women and children, began to move out of the public housing developments of Chicago, Illinois, to the mostly white middle class suburbs. These families were part of the Gautreaux program, one of the largest court-ordered desegregation efforts in the United States. This book tells the story…
Descriptors: Blacks, Housing, Human Services, Low Income Groups
Baker, Joan M. – 1993
An overview of Alex Kotlowitz' book "There Are No Children Here" substantiates his claim that the United States is moving toward two separate and unequal societies--one black and one white. His book recounts the story of two boys (and their mother) who live in the Henry Horner Housing Project in Chicago. The mother believes in the power…
Descriptors: Cultural Context, Educationally Disadvantaged, Elementary Secondary Education, Family Environment