Abstract
The impact of the racial composition of neighborhoods, rather than race per se, is examined in this study. The sample includes 1027 families with children attending 5 of the 11 former school districts in New Castle County, Delaware. Questionnaires were sent to these families in the spring of 1978, prior to school desegregation, and again in the spring of 1979, at the end of the first year of desegregation. Scales were developed to measure attitudinal variables for both parents and students. These included racial attitudes, attitudes toward school desegregation, and attitudes about education. Results show that attitudes both before and after desegregation varied according to the neighborhood racial composition. Thus it is important in future studies of racial attitudes to examine neighborhood racial characteristics as well as the race of the individual.
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This research has been supported by a grant from the Rockefeller Foundation, Division of Social Sciences.
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Darden, J.T., Parsons, M.A. The effect of neighborhood racial composition on black and white attitudes. Urban Rev 13, 103–109 (1981). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01956011
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01956011