It is proposed to study racial and ethnic differentiation in U.S. cities in 1880, with a particular emphasis on the relationships between people and places. The project will use full-count census data from the U.S. Census of Population in 1880 to create a wide range of summary files, aggregating information at levels of geography including the enumeration district, city or town, county, metropolitan region, and state. For all 98 separately identified cities in 1880, analyses will investigate the effects of city and group characteristics on aggregate patterns of separation or assimilation. For the largest 25 cities, Geographic Information System (CIS) maps will be developed for all variables in 1880 at the level of enumeration districts. In these cities, measures of spatial clustering will be used to identify ethnic neighborhoods. Models will be estimated analyzing what personal and household characteristics of individuals are associated with living within (or outside) ethnic neighborhoods and working within (or outside) ethnic employment niches. A separate sample of 37,000 men with records matched between 1870 and 1880 will be the basis for models in which key characteristics in 1870 will be introduced. An important component of the project will be the creation and dissemination of public-use data files. These will include pretabulated summary files based on individual data, CIS boundary files for enumeration districts in major cities, and a multilevel dataset that combines individual and household data for a 1 percent sample of the population with information about the places where they live. This new data infrastructure will expand opportunities for social scientists of all disciplines on a key period in American history: a time when the Western frontier was still being settled, when the transformation of the country from an agricultural to an industrial economy was only beginning, when African Americans had only recently been released from slavery, when cities like Chicago were in their infancy and older cities like New York were still receiving their first waves of German and Irish immigrants, and the nation was on the verge of the next great wave of population movements - of blacks from South to North, of immigrants from Southern and Eastern Europe, and Chinese and other groups from East Asia. ? ? ? ?

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NICHD)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01HD049493-02
Application #
7393657
Study Section
Social Sciences and Population Studies Study Section (SSPS)
Program Officer
Clark, Rebecca L
Project Start
2007-04-06
Project End
2010-03-31
Budget Start
2008-04-01
Budget End
2009-03-31
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2008
Total Cost
$290,687
Indirect Cost
Name
Brown University
Department
Type
Organized Research Units
DUNS #
001785542
City
Providence
State
RI
Country
United States
Zip Code
02912
Logan, John R (2017) Racial segregation in postbellum Southern cities: The case of Washington, D.C. Demogr Res 36:1759-1784
Logan, John R; Shin, Hyoung-Jin (2016) Birds of a Feather: Social Bases of Neighborhood Formation in Newark, New Jersey, 1880. Demography 53:1085-108
Logan, John R; Zhang, Weiwei; Chunyu, Miao David (2015) Emergent ghettos: black neighborhoods in New York and Chicago, 1880-1940. AJS 120:1055-94
Xu, Hongwei; Logan, John R; Short, Susan E (2014) Integrating space with place in health research: a multilevel spatial investigation using child mortality in 1880 Newark, New Jersey. Demography 51:811-34
Xu, Hongwei (2014) Comparing Spatial and Multilevel Regression Models for Binary Outcomes in Neighborhood Studies. Sociol Methodol 44:229-272
Spielman, Seth E; Logan, John R (2013) Using High-Resolution Population Data to Identify Neighborhoods and Establish Their Boundaries. Ann Assoc Am Geogr 103:67-84
Páez, Antonio; Ruiz, Manuel; López, Fernando et al. (2012) Measuring Ethnic Clustering and Exposure with the Q statistic: An Exploratory Analysis of Irish, Germans, and Yankees in 1880 Newark. Ann Assoc Am Geogr 102:84-102
Logan, John R; Shin, Hyoung-Jin (2012) Immigrant Incorporation in American Cities: Contextual Determinants of Irish, German and British Intermarriage in 1880. Int Migr Rev 46:
Logan, John R; Zhang, Weiwei (2012) White ethnic residential segregation in historical perspective: US cities in 1880. Soc Sci Res 41:1292-306
Logan, John R; Shin, Hyoung-Jin (2012) Assimilation by the third generation? Marital choices of white ethnics at the dawn of the twentieth century. Soc Sci Res 41:1116-25

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