Racial segregation in Miami is analogous to most other American cities, such that non-Hispanic Blacks are the most racially segregated group. Figure 4 illustrates the indices of segregation between racial and ethnic groups in Miami/Dade County. With an index of 73.2, Hispanics and Non-Hispanic Blacks are the groups with the highest degree of segregation, this means that an estimated 73.2% of the groups’ population would have to relocate in order to balance the degree of evenness. As shown by Figure 4, Miami has a high degree of residential segregation. Hispanics, Blacks, and Whites cluster together, while Asians and other minority groups are dispersed intermittently throughout the White and Hispanic populations. Miami is unique in the sense that Whites are not the dominating control factor in determining residential segregation. Hispanics, regardless to class, choose to sequester in clustered neighborhoods, isolating them from both Whites and Blacks. Whites have the resources …show more content…
For Asians and other minority groups, economic factors appear to be a briefly notable determent of their residential placement. Their dispersement in a wealthy or impoverished area is partially contingent to their income or occupation. Hispanics, Whites, and Asians are all residentially coordinated regardless to their economic standing or occupation. Therefore, it is not the most effective variable to describe the residential placement of these individual groups. "Income made virtually no difference in the extent of residential segregation [in American cities in 1970 and 1980] since prosperous Blacks and Whites were as residentially segregated from each other as impoverished Blacks were segregated from poor Whites.... Increasing income among Blacks may have led to higher standards of living and better quality housing but . . . it hardly led to residential integration.” (Boswell, Cruz-Baez,