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African-American middle class

The African-American middle class consists of African-Americans who have middle-class status within the American class structure. It is a societal level within the African-American community that primarily began to develop in the early 1960s,[1][2] when the ongoing Civil Rights Movement[3] led to the outlawing of de jure racial segregation. The African American middle class exists throughout the United States, particularly in the Northeast and in the South, with the largest contiguous majority black middle-class neighborhoods being in the Washington, DC suburbs in Maryland.[4] The African American middle class is also prevalent in the Atlanta, Charlotte, Houston, Dallas, New York, San Antonio and Chicago areas.[5][6]

Definition of middle class edit

As of the 2010 Census, black households had a median income of $32,068,[7] which placed the median black household within the second income quintile.[7] 27.3% of black households earned an income between $25,000 and $50,000, 15.2% earned between $50,000 and $75,000, 7.6% earned between $75,000 and $100,000, and 9.4% earned more than $100,000.[7]

Although the composition of the Black middle class varies by definition, the Black middle class is typically divided into a lower-middle class, core middle class, and an upper-middle class.[8][9][10] The black lower-middle class is concentrated in sales, clerical positions, and blue-collar occupations,[8] while the black upper-middle class (sometimes combined into the black upper class)[11] is characterized by highly educated professionals in white-collar occupations, such as health care professionals, lawyers, professors, and engineers.[12][13]

History edit

 
Row houses in a historically black neighborhood of Chicago

Many African-Americans had limited opportunities for advancement to middle class status prior to 1961 because of racial discrimination, segregation, and the fact that most lived in the rural South. In 1960, 43% of the white population completed high school, while only 20% of the black population did the same. African-Americans had little to no access to higher education, and only 3% graduated from college. Those blacks who were professionals were mainly confined to serving the African-American population. Outside of the black community, they often worked in unskilled industrial jobs. Black women who worked were frequently domestic servants. However, black women in the post-slavery emerging middle class also worked as teachers, nurses, businesswomen, journalists and other professionals.[14]

Economic growth, public policy, Black skill development, and the civil rights movement all contributed to the surfacing of a larger black middle class. The civil rights movement helped to remove barriers to higher education. As opportunities for African-Americans expanded, blacks began to take advantage of the new possibilities. Homeownership has been crucial in the rise of the black middle class, including the movement of African-Americans to the suburbs, which has also translated into better educational opportunities. By 1980, over 50% of the African-American population had graduated from high school and eight percent graduated from college. In 2006, 86% of blacks between age 25 and 29 had graduated from high school and 19% had completed a bachelor's degrees.[15] As of 2003, the percentage of black householders is 48%, compared to 43% in 1990.[16]

Rise and decline edit

The rise to the middle class for African-Americans occurred throughout the 1960s; however, it leveled off and began to decline in the following decades due to multiple recessions that struck America throughout the 1970s and 1980s. Blacks and other groups suffered the brunt of those recessions.[17] There is also evidence to suggest the wealth gap has been exacerbated by the housing market bubble in 2006 and the recession that followed from late 2007 to mid-2009, which took a far greater toll on depleting minority wealth.[18]

Racial wealth gap edit

According to a 2011 study from Pew Research Center, whites possess 20 times more wealth than African-Americans and 18 times that of Latinos.[18] Whereas white families have accumulated $113,149 of wealth on average, black households have only accumulated $5,677 in wealth on average.[18] As shown on Eurweb.com,[19] of the 14 million black households in the U.S. in 2015, only 5% had more than $350,000 in net worth, and less than 1% of black families had over $1 million in net assets.

As of 1999, Blacks and whites similarly situated within the "educational middle class" live in distinct wealth worlds. Whereas educationally middle-class whites possessed $111,000 in median net worth, educationally middle-class Black families had only $33,500; in terms of assets, the disparity was $56,000 to $15,000. Looking at only "the occupational middle-class", an equally pronounced gap is visible: middle-class whites had $123,000 in median net worth and $60,000 in median net financial assets compared to $26,500 and $11,200 for middle-class African-Americans.[20] According to Thomas Shapiro (2004), white families possess "between three and five times as much wealth as equally achieving Black middle class families."[20]

A 2016 article entitled "Black Wealth Hardly Exists, Even When You Include NBA, NFL and Rap Stars" related recent findings of the Corporation For Economic Development (CFED) and the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS), which calculated that "it would take 228 years for the average Black family to amass the same level of wealth the average white family holds today in 2016... According to the Institute on Assets and Social Policy, for each dollar of increase in average income an African-American household saw from 1984 to 2009 just $0.69 in additional wealth was generated, compared with the same dollar in increased income creating an additional $5.19 in wealth for a similarly situated white household."[21]

Importance of home equity edit

Most contemporary wealth is built in America on home equity. Present-day income is thus an insufficient measure of household socioeconomic status.[22] Looking at disparities between wealth accumulation among African-Americans and whites paints a far more accurate picture of racial socioeconomic differences. The estimated median wealth of black households is $36,000, while white households estimated their parents' median wealth at $150,000.[23] African-Americans, who were historically denied access to housing wealth, face a substantial wealth disparity compared to whites. Asset poverty affects an African-American's ability to procure other forms of middle class lifestyle and other forms of wealth.[24]

Impact of discrimination edit

Housing discrimination edit

 
A 1936 "residential security" map of Philadelphia, classifying various neighborhoods by estimated risk of mortgage loans

In a project conducted by the University of Washington's Civil Rights and Labor History Program in 2010, it was found that records of more than 400 properties in Seattle suburbs alone contained now-illegal discriminatory language that formerly excluded several ethnic groups.[25]

Another barrier is discriminatory mortgage lending patterns and redlining. Although informal discrimination and segregation had existed in the United States, the specific practice called "redlining" began with the National Housing Act of 1934, which established the Federal Housing Administration (FHA).[26][27] During the heyday of redlining, the areas most frequently discriminated against were black inner city neighborhoods. For example, in Atlanta in the 1980s, a Pulitzer Prize-winning series of articles by investigative reporter Bill Dedman showed that banks would often lend to lower-income whites but not to middle-income or upper-income blacks.[28] The use of blacklists is a related mechanism also used by redliners to keep track of groups, areas, and people that the discriminating party feels should be denied business or aid or other transactions. In the academic literature, redlining falls under the broader category of credit rationing.

In a 2001 book entitled Housing Discrimination and Residential Segregation as Causes of Poverty, author John Yinger asserted that when applying for a home mortgage, African-American and Hispanic customers are 82% more likely to be turned down for a loan than were white customers.[29] Black renters also favored a 10.7 percent chance of being totally excluded from housing made available to comparable white renters and a 23.3 percent chance of learning about fewer apartments.[30] Discrimination in housing practices and residential segregation leads to substantial wealth gaps across races. Home ownership is typically a source of insurance against poverty. However, for blacks and Hispanics, home ownership rates have never made it past 50% [as of 2001].[31]

Residential segregation edit

Segregated housing patterns also keep African-Americans far from suburbanizing jobs and associated job information networks.[32] This mismatch between residential locations and employment reduces the employment options for middle- and lower-class African-Americans.[33]

There is a significant black suburbanization lag in which African-Americans are less likely than others to adopt suburban residential patterns.[34] Black suburbs tend to be areas of low socioeconomic status and population density. Many are former manufacturing suburbs with weak tax bases, poor municipal services, and high levels of debt, compromising the secure middle-class lifestyle of its African-American inhabitants.[35]

Achievement gap edit

Structural and institutional explanations edit

The disparity in expenditures on education between inner cities and affluent suburbs exist almost entirely due to the system of property taxes which most school systems rely on for funding.[36] By attending spatially segregated school systems, children of the black middle class do not have access to the same educational and employment opportunities as their white counterparts. In general, minority students are more likely to reside in lower or middle class inner city neighborhoods, meaning minority students are more likely to attend poorly funded schools based on the districting patterns within the school system. Schools in lower-income districts tend to employ less qualified teachers and have fewer educational resources.[37] Research shows that teacher effectiveness is the most important in-school factor affecting student learning. Good teachers can actually close or eliminate the gaps in achievement on the standardized tests that separate white and minority students.[38]

Cultural explanations edit

The culture and environment in which children are raised may play a role in the achievement gap. One explanation that has been suggested for racial and ethnic differences in standardized test performance is that standardized IQ tests and testing procedures are culturally biased toward European-American middle class knowledge and experiences.[39] Social psychologist Claude Steele suggests that minority children and adolescents may also experience stereotype threat—the fear that they will be judged to have traits associated with negative appraisals and/or stereotypes of their race or ethnic group which produces test anxiety and keeps them from doing as well as they could on tests. According to Steele, minority test takers experience anxiety, believing that if they do poorly on their test they will confirm the stereotypes about inferior intellectual performance of their minority group. As a result, a self-fulfilling prophecy begins, and the child performs at a level beneath his or her inherent abilities. Some researchers[40] also hypothesize that in some cases, minorities, especially African American students, may stop trying in school because they do not want to be accused of "acting white" by their peers.[41] It has also been suggested that some minority students simply stop trying because they do not believe they will ever see the true benefits of their hard work. As some researchers point out, minority students may feel little motivation to do well in school because they do not believe it will pay off in the form of a better job or upward social mobility.[41]

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Sikes, / Joe R. Feagin, Melvin P. (1994). Living with racism: the Black middle-class experience ([Nachdr.] ed.). Boston: Beacon Press. ISBN 9780807009253.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ Collins, Sharon M. (April 1983). "The Making of the Black Middle Class". Social Problems. University of California Press. 30 (4): 369–382. doi:10.2307/800108. JSTOR 800108.
  3. ^ Landry, Bart (1988). The new Black middle class (Paperback ed.). Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 9780520064652.
  4. ^ "Prince George's County's belt of high-income majority Black Census tracts really is unique". November 6, 2020. Retrieved July 21, 2021.
  5. ^ Graves, Earl G. Sr. (2016-12-08). "Join us in Houston, America's Next Great Black Business Mecca". Black Enterprise. from the original on 2019-08-20. Retrieved 2019-08-20.
  6. ^ "San Antonio makes top 10 list in best cities for Black professionals, #1 in Texas".
  7. ^ a b c DeNavas-Walt, Carmen; Proctor, Bernadette D.; Smith, Jessica C. "Income, Poverty, and Health Insurance Coverage in the United States: 2010" (PDF). United States Census Bureau. Retrieved July 20, 2012.
  8. ^ a b Lacy, Karyn (2007). Blue-chip Black Race, class, and status in the new Black middle class ([Online-Ausg.] ed.). Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 9780520251151.
  9. ^ Wilson, William Julius (1980). The declining significance of race: Blacks and changing American institutions (2nd ed.). Chicago: University of Chicago press. ISBN 9780226901299.
  10. ^ Lacy, Karyn (July 25, 2011). "The Vulnerable and the Comfortable". New York Times. Retrieved July 20, 2012.
  11. ^ Lee, Andrea (February 21, 1999). "Black Like Us". New York Times. Retrieved July 19, 2012.
  12. ^ James D. Williams, ed. (1984). The State of Black America, 1984 (10th Anniversary ed.). New York: National Urban League. ISBN 9780878559374.
  13. ^ Doman Lum, ed. (10 June 2010). Culturally Competent Practice: a framework for understanding diverse groups and justice issues (4th ed.). Belmont, CA: Brooks/Cole. ISBN 9780840034434.
  14. ^ Carter G. Woodson, and Lorenzo Johnston Greene, The Early Black History Movement, University of Illinois Press, 2007, p 85
  15. ^ Koditschek, Theodore, Cha-Jua, Sundiata Keita, and Neville, Helen. Race Struggles, p. 31. (2009)
  16. ^ , US Census Bureau, February 2003.
  17. ^ Mink, Gwendolyn; O'Connor, Alice (2004). Poverty in the United States: A-K. p. 42.
  18. ^ a b c Kochhar, Rakesh; Taylor, Paul; Fry, Richard (26 July 2011). "Wealth Gaps Rise to Record Highs Between Whites, Blacks, Hispanics". Pew Research Center.
  19. ^ "Only 5% of African American Households Have More than $350,000 in Net Worth". Eurweb.com. November 10, 2015. Retrieved June 17, 2018.
  20. ^ a b Shapiro, Thomas M. (2004). The Hidden Cost of Being African American: How Wealth Perpetuates Inequality. Oxford University Press. pp. 90–91. ISBN 978-0-19-518138-8.
  21. ^ http://inequality.org/black-wealth-exists/ "Black Wealth Hardly Exists, Even When You Include NBA, NFL and Rap Stars"
  22. ^ Conrad; Whitehead; Mason; Stewart (2005). "The Racial Wealth Gap". In Shapiro; Kenty-Drane (eds.). African Americans in the US Economy. p. 175.
  23. ^ Conrad, Cecilia A.; Whitehead, John; Mason, Patrick; Stewart, James (2005). "The Racial Wealth Gap". In Shapiro, Thomas M.; Kenty-Drane, Jessica L. (eds.). African Americans in the US Economy. p. 179.
  24. ^ Conrad; Whitehead; Mason; Stewart (2005). "The Racial Wealth Gap". In Shapiro; Kenty-Drane (eds.). African Americans in the US Economy. p. 177.
  25. ^ Latshaw, Greg (August 3, 2010). "Racism shadows property covenants". USA Today.
  26. ^ Jackson, Kenneth T. (1985), Crabgrass Frontier: The Suburbanization of the United States, New York: Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-504983-7
  27. ^ Madrigal, Alexis C. (2014-05-22). "The Racist Housing Policy That Made Your Neighborhood". The Atlantic. Retrieved 2018-11-10.
  28. ^ Dedman, Bill (1988-05-01). "The Color of Money". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Retrieved 2009-01-05.
  29. ^ Yinger, John (2001). Housing Discrimination and Residential Segregation as Causes of Poverty. p. 375.
  30. ^ Yinger (2001). Housing Discrimination and Residential Segregation. p. 373.
  31. ^ Yinger (2001). Housing Discrimination and Residential Segregation.
  32. ^ Yinger (2001). Housing Discrimination and Residential Segregation. p. 379.
  33. ^ Yinger (2001). Housing Discrimination and Residential Segregation. p. 369.
  34. ^ Massey, Douglas (2004). The New Geography of Inequality in Urban America. New Haven: Yale University Press.
  35. ^ Massey (2004). The New Geography of Inequality in Urban America. p. 177.
  36. ^ Karnasiewicz, Sarah (September 22, 2005). "Apartheid America". Salon.
  37. ^ Roscigno, V. J.; Tomaskovic-Devey, D.; Crowley, M. (2006). "Education and the Inequalities of Place". Social Forces. 84 (4): 2121. doi:10.1353/sof.2006.0108. S2CID 145658531.
  38. ^ Gordon, Kane & Staiger (2006). 'Identifying Effective Teachers Using Performance on the Job.' Brookings Institution.
  39. ^ Helms, Janet E. (September 1992). "Why is there no study of cultural equivalence in standardized cognitive ability testing?". American Psychologist. 9. 47 (9): 1083–1101. doi:10.1037/0003-066X.47.9.1083.
  40. ^ Steele, C., and J. Aronson, "Stereotype Threat and the Test Performance of Academically Successful African Americans" (pp. 401–430), in C. Jencks and M. Phillips (Eds.), The Black-White Test Score Gap (Washington, DC: The Brookings Institution, 1998).
  41. ^ a b Fordham, S.; Ogbu, J. U. (1986). "Black students' school success: Coping with the ?burden of ?acting white??". The Urban Review. 18 (3): 176. doi:10.1007/BF01112192. S2CID 144414814.

References edit

  • Landry, Bart. "The New Black Middle Class". 1987.
  • Harris Jr., Robert. "The Rise of the Black Middle Class". The World and I Magazine. February 1999. Vol. 14, p. 40.

Further reading edit

External links edit

african, american, middle, class, consists, african, americans, have, middle, class, status, within, american, class, structure, societal, level, within, african, american, community, that, primarily, began, develop, early, 1960s, when, ongoing, civil, rights,. The African American middle class consists of African Americans who have middle class status within the American class structure It is a societal level within the African American community that primarily began to develop in the early 1960s 1 2 when the ongoing Civil Rights Movement 3 led to the outlawing of de jure racial segregation The African American middle class exists throughout the United States particularly in the Northeast and in the South with the largest contiguous majority black middle class neighborhoods being in the Washington DC suburbs in Maryland 4 The African American middle class is also prevalent in the Atlanta Charlotte Houston Dallas New York San Antonio and Chicago areas 5 6 Contents 1 Definition of middle class 2 History 2 1 Rise and decline 3 Racial wealth gap 3 1 Importance of home equity 4 Impact of discrimination 4 1 Housing discrimination 4 2 Residential segregation 5 Achievement gap 5 1 Structural and institutional explanations 5 2 Cultural explanations 6 See also 7 Footnotes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksDefinition of middle class editAs of the 2010 Census black households had a median income of 32 068 7 which placed the median black household within the second income quintile 7 27 3 of black households earned an income between 25 000 and 50 000 15 2 earned between 50 000 and 75 000 7 6 earned between 75 000 and 100 000 and 9 4 earned more than 100 000 7 Although the composition of the Black middle class varies by definition the Black middle class is typically divided into a lower middle class core middle class and an upper middle class 8 9 10 The black lower middle class is concentrated in sales clerical positions and blue collar occupations 8 while the black upper middle class sometimes combined into the black upper class 11 is characterized by highly educated professionals in white collar occupations such as health care professionals lawyers professors and engineers 12 13 History edit nbsp Row houses in a historically black neighborhood of ChicagoMany African Americans had limited opportunities for advancement to middle class status prior to 1961 because of racial discrimination segregation and the fact that most lived in the rural South In 1960 43 of the white population completed high school while only 20 of the black population did the same African Americans had little to no access to higher education and only 3 graduated from college Those blacks who were professionals were mainly confined to serving the African American population Outside of the black community they often worked in unskilled industrial jobs Black women who worked were frequently domestic servants However black women in the post slavery emerging middle class also worked as teachers nurses businesswomen journalists and other professionals 14 Economic growth public policy Black skill development and the civil rights movement all contributed to the surfacing of a larger black middle class The civil rights movement helped to remove barriers to higher education As opportunities for African Americans expanded blacks began to take advantage of the new possibilities Homeownership has been crucial in the rise of the black middle class including the movement of African Americans to the suburbs which has also translated into better educational opportunities By 1980 over 50 of the African American population had graduated from high school and eight percent graduated from college In 2006 86 of blacks between age 25 and 29 had graduated from high school and 19 had completed a bachelor s degrees 15 As of 2003 the percentage of black householders is 48 compared to 43 in 1990 16 Rise and decline edit The rise to the middle class for African Americans occurred throughout the 1960s however it leveled off and began to decline in the following decades due to multiple recessions that struck America throughout the 1970s and 1980s Blacks and other groups suffered the brunt of those recessions 17 There is also evidence to suggest the wealth gap has been exacerbated by the housing market bubble in 2006 and the recession that followed from late 2007 to mid 2009 which took a far greater toll on depleting minority wealth 18 Racial wealth gap editAccording to a 2011 study from Pew Research Center whites possess 20 times more wealth than African Americans and 18 times that of Latinos 18 Whereas white families have accumulated 113 149 of wealth on average black households have only accumulated 5 677 in wealth on average 18 As shown on Eurweb com 19 of the 14 million black households in the U S in 2015 only 5 had more than 350 000 in net worth and less than 1 of black families had over 1 million in net assets As of 1999 Blacks and whites similarly situated within the educational middle class live in distinct wealth worlds Whereas educationally middle class whites possessed 111 000 in median net worth educationally middle class Black families had only 33 500 in terms of assets the disparity was 56 000 to 15 000 Looking at only the occupational middle class an equally pronounced gap is visible middle class whites had 123 000 in median net worth and 60 000 in median net financial assets compared to 26 500 and 11 200 for middle class African Americans 20 According to Thomas Shapiro 2004 white families possess between three and five times as much wealth as equally achieving Black middle class families 20 A 2016 article entitled Black Wealth Hardly Exists Even When You Include NBA NFL and Rap Stars related recent findings of the Corporation For Economic Development CFED and the Institute for Policy Studies IPS which calculated that it would take 228 years for the average Black family to amass the same level of wealth the average white family holds today in 2016 According to the Institute on Assets and Social Policy for each dollar of increase in average income an African American household saw from 1984 to 2009 just 0 69 in additional wealth was generated compared with the same dollar in increased income creating an additional 5 19 in wealth for a similarly situated white household 21 Importance of home equity edit Most contemporary wealth is built in America on home equity Present day income is thus an insufficient measure of household socioeconomic status 22 Looking at disparities between wealth accumulation among African Americans and whites paints a far more accurate picture of racial socioeconomic differences The estimated median wealth of black households is 36 000 while white households estimated their parents median wealth at 150 000 23 African Americans who were historically denied access to housing wealth face a substantial wealth disparity compared to whites Asset poverty affects an African American s ability to procure other forms of middle class lifestyle and other forms of wealth 24 Impact of discrimination editHousing discrimination edit Main article Housing segregation in the United States nbsp A 1936 residential security map of Philadelphia classifying various neighborhoods by estimated risk of mortgage loansIn a project conducted by the University of Washington s Civil Rights and Labor History Program in 2010 it was found that records of more than 400 properties in Seattle suburbs alone contained now illegal discriminatory language that formerly excluded several ethnic groups 25 Another barrier is discriminatory mortgage lending patterns and redlining Although informal discrimination and segregation had existed in the United States the specific practice called redlining began with the National Housing Act of 1934 which established the Federal Housing Administration FHA 26 27 During the heyday of redlining the areas most frequently discriminated against were black inner city neighborhoods For example in Atlanta in the 1980s a Pulitzer Prize winning series of articles by investigative reporter Bill Dedman showed that banks would often lend to lower income whites but not to middle income or upper income blacks 28 The use of blacklists is a related mechanism also used by redliners to keep track of groups areas and people that the discriminating party feels should be denied business or aid or other transactions In the academic literature redlining falls under the broader category of credit rationing In a 2001 book entitled Housing Discrimination and Residential Segregation as Causes of Poverty author John Yinger asserted that when applying for a home mortgage African American and Hispanic customers are 82 more likely to be turned down for a loan than were white customers 29 Black renters also favored a 10 7 percent chance of being totally excluded from housing made available to comparable white renters and a 23 3 percent chance of learning about fewer apartments 30 Discrimination in housing practices and residential segregation leads to substantial wealth gaps across races Home ownership is typically a source of insurance against poverty However for blacks and Hispanics home ownership rates have never made it past 50 as of 2001 31 Residential segregation edit Main article Residential segregation in the United States Segregated housing patterns also keep African Americans far from suburbanizing jobs and associated job information networks 32 This mismatch between residential locations and employment reduces the employment options for middle and lower class African Americans 33 There is a significant black suburbanization lag in which African Americans are less likely than others to adopt suburban residential patterns 34 Black suburbs tend to be areas of low socioeconomic status and population density Many are former manufacturing suburbs with weak tax bases poor municipal services and high levels of debt compromising the secure middle class lifestyle of its African American inhabitants 35 Achievement gap editStructural and institutional explanations edit The disparity in expenditures on education between inner cities and affluent suburbs exist almost entirely due to the system of property taxes which most school systems rely on for funding 36 By attending spatially segregated school systems children of the black middle class do not have access to the same educational and employment opportunities as their white counterparts In general minority students are more likely to reside in lower or middle class inner city neighborhoods meaning minority students are more likely to attend poorly funded schools based on the districting patterns within the school system Schools in lower income districts tend to employ less qualified teachers and have fewer educational resources 37 Research shows that teacher effectiveness is the most important in school factor affecting student learning Good teachers can actually close or eliminate the gaps in achievement on the standardized tests that separate white and minority students 38 Cultural explanations edit The culture and environment in which children are raised may play a role in the achievement gap One explanation that has been suggested for racial and ethnic differences in standardized test performance is that standardized IQ tests and testing procedures are culturally biased toward European American middle class knowledge and experiences 39 Social psychologist Claude Steele suggests that minority children and adolescents may also experience stereotype threat the fear that they will be judged to have traits associated with negative appraisals and or stereotypes of their race or ethnic group which produces test anxiety and keeps them from doing as well as they could on tests According to Steele minority test takers experience anxiety believing that if they do poorly on their test they will confirm the stereotypes about inferior intellectual performance of their minority group As a result a self fulfilling prophecy begins and the child performs at a level beneath his or her inherent abilities Some researchers 40 also hypothesize that in some cases minorities especially African American students may stop trying in school because they do not want to be accused of acting white by their peers 41 It has also been suggested that some minority students simply stop trying because they do not believe they will ever see the true benefits of their hard work As some researchers point out minority students may feel little motivation to do well in school because they do not believe it will pay off in the form of a better job or upward social mobility 41 See also edit nbsp United States portalAfrican American upper class Racial inequality in the United States American middle classFootnotes edit Sikes Joe R Feagin Melvin P 1994 Living with racism the Black middle class experience Nachdr ed Boston Beacon Press ISBN 9780807009253 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Collins Sharon M April 1983 The Making of the Black Middle Class Social Problems University of California Press 30 4 369 382 doi 10 2307 800108 JSTOR 800108 Landry Bart 1988 The new Black middle class Paperback ed Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 9780520064652 Prince George s County s belt of high income majority Black Census tracts really is unique November 6 2020 Retrieved July 21 2021 Graves Earl G Sr 2016 12 08 Join us in Houston America s Next Great Black Business Mecca Black Enterprise Archived from the original on 2019 08 20 Retrieved 2019 08 20 San Antonio makes top 10 list in best cities for Black professionals 1 in Texas a b c DeNavas Walt Carmen Proctor Bernadette D Smith Jessica C Income Poverty and Health Insurance Coverage in the United States 2010 PDF United States Census Bureau Retrieved July 20 2012 a b Lacy Karyn 2007 Blue chip Black Race class and status in the new Black middle class Online Ausg ed Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 9780520251151 Wilson William Julius 1980 The declining significance of race Blacks and changing American institutions 2nd ed Chicago University of Chicago press ISBN 9780226901299 Lacy Karyn July 25 2011 The Vulnerable and the Comfortable New York Times Retrieved July 20 2012 Lee Andrea February 21 1999 Black Like Us New York Times Retrieved July 19 2012 James D Williams ed 1984 The State of Black America 1984 10th Anniversary ed New York National Urban League ISBN 9780878559374 Doman Lum ed 10 June 2010 Culturally Competent Practice a framework for understanding diverse groups and justice issues 4th ed Belmont CA Brooks Cole ISBN 9780840034434 Carter G Woodson and Lorenzo Johnston Greene The Early Black History Movement University of Illinois Press 2007 p 85 Koditschek Theodore Cha Jua Sundiata Keita and Neville Helen Race Struggles p 31 2009 African American History Month US Census Bureau February 2003 Mink Gwendolyn O Connor Alice 2004 Poverty in the United States A K p 42 a b c Kochhar Rakesh Taylor Paul Fry Richard 26 July 2011 Wealth Gaps Rise to Record Highs Between Whites Blacks Hispanics Pew Research Center Only 5 of African American Households Have More than 350 000 in Net Worth Eurweb com November 10 2015 Retrieved June 17 2018 a b Shapiro Thomas M 2004 The Hidden Cost of Being African American How Wealth Perpetuates Inequality Oxford University Press pp 90 91 ISBN 978 0 19 518138 8 http inequality org black wealth exists Black Wealth Hardly Exists Even When You Include NBA NFL and Rap Stars Conrad Whitehead Mason Stewart 2005 The Racial Wealth Gap In Shapiro Kenty Drane eds African Americans in the US Economy p 175 Conrad Cecilia A Whitehead John Mason Patrick Stewart James 2005 The Racial Wealth Gap In Shapiro Thomas M Kenty Drane Jessica L eds African Americans in the US Economy p 179 Conrad Whitehead Mason Stewart 2005 The Racial Wealth Gap In Shapiro Kenty Drane eds African Americans in the US Economy p 177 Latshaw Greg August 3 2010 Racism shadows property covenants USA Today Jackson Kenneth T 1985 Crabgrass Frontier The Suburbanization of the United States New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 504983 7 Madrigal Alexis C 2014 05 22 The Racist Housing Policy That Made Your Neighborhood The Atlantic Retrieved 2018 11 10 Dedman Bill 1988 05 01 The Color of Money The Atlanta Journal Constitution Retrieved 2009 01 05 Yinger John 2001 Housing Discrimination and Residential Segregation as Causes of Poverty p 375 Yinger 2001 Housing Discrimination and Residential Segregation p 373 Yinger 2001 Housing Discrimination and Residential Segregation Yinger 2001 Housing Discrimination and Residential Segregation p 379 Yinger 2001 Housing Discrimination and Residential Segregation p 369 Massey Douglas 2004 The New Geography of Inequality in Urban America New Haven Yale University Press Massey 2004 The New Geography of Inequality in Urban America p 177 Karnasiewicz Sarah September 22 2005 Apartheid America Salon Roscigno V J Tomaskovic Devey D Crowley M 2006 Education and the Inequalities of Place Social Forces 84 4 2121 doi 10 1353 sof 2006 0108 S2CID 145658531 Gordon Kane amp Staiger 2006 Identifying Effective Teachers Using Performance on the Job Brookings Institution Helms Janet E September 1992 Why is there no study of cultural equivalence in standardized cognitive ability testing American Psychologist 9 47 9 1083 1101 doi 10 1037 0003 066X 47 9 1083 Steele C and J Aronson Stereotype Threat and the Test Performance of Academically Successful African Americans pp 401 430 in C Jencks and M Phillips Eds The Black White Test Score Gap Washington DC The Brookings Institution 1998 a b Fordham S Ogbu J U 1986 Black students school success Coping with the burden of acting white The Urban Review 18 3 176 doi 10 1007 BF01112192 S2CID 144414814 References editLandry Bart The New Black Middle Class 1987 Harris Jr Robert The Rise of the Black Middle Class The World and I Magazine February 1999 Vol 14 p 40 Further reading editE Franklin Frazier Black Bourgeoisie Free Press New York 1957 Lawrence Otis Graham Our Kind of People Harper Perennial New York 1999 Mary Patillo McCoy Black Picket Fences University of Chicago Press Chicago 2000 Bart Landry The New Black Middle Class University of California Press Berkeley 1987 Melvin Oliver and Thomas Shapiro Black Wealth White Wealth A New Perspective on Racial Inequality Routledge New York 1995 Susan Tolliver Black Families in Corporate America Sage Publications Thousand Oaks California 1998 Michael Dyson Is Bill Cosby Right Or Has the Black Middle Class Lost Its Minds New York Basic Civitas Books 2005 ISBN 0 465 01719 3External links editFrom Recession to Depression The Destruction of the Black Middle Class video report by Democracy Now Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title African American middle class amp oldid 1189406780, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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