“Income Inequality, Race, and Place” does a study on if lower incomes create higher crime rates. The study proves that a person’s income can affect that individual willing to commit a crime. If you live in poverty you are most likely going to execute a murder or a robbery. Also, the study show that is you were a stable home owner the crime rates were not high. People who were not a homeowner and consistently moved are more likely to commit a crime in a neighborhood. There are more minority races living in poverty than the majority race. This article was conducted in 2007 using the census in 19 cities in 2000. The article helps me because the test was conducted in many cities. I do believe that more cities should be tested to receive more data.…
In 2005 the city of New Orleans held 463,072 people. And now its five years after hurricane Katrina and there are 343,829 people living in the still-recovering city. In racial breakdown of New Orleans they have 217,256 Blacks; 105,732 White; 16, 812 Hispanic; 10,806 Asian; two or more race 2,910; other race 969; American…
In a country containing so much diversity and history, it is practically impossible to locate one city which embodies American diversity. A colony started by the French was…
In nineteenth- century New Orleans, respectability was arguably more difficult to achieve and maintain than in any other parts of the continent. The urban culture of New Orleans didn't help to add to the respectability they tried to achieve. For instance, New Orleans is notorious for having brothels, narcotics, alcohol, loud music coming in and out of saloons and dance halls, promoting an irregular type of behavior. The Crescent City was a place cursed with violence and crimes, and filled with Mafia or the Black Hand. The rise of concert saloons also had aided to the fact of the lack of respectability of New Orleans. Concert saloons were noisy theaters where people could drink and watch sexual stage performances, ushering in crime to shopping…
The new orleans school integration tell how black was discriminated and tortured.On November 14, 1960, four girls, shielded and protected by armed United States marshals, integrated the In the days following the integration, riots led by staunch segregationists erupted throughout the city and student enrollments at the two desegregated schools dwindled, as parents chose to enroll their children in the city's private schools. two schools.…
IT was a crucial speech, high-stakes even for a man used to giving important speeches: The first black president of the United States had to acknowledge, and then bind up, the nation’s racial wounds. A year ago, after the massacre of nine souls at prayer at the Emanuel A.M.E. Church, Barack Obama traveled to Charleston, S.C., to eulogize its pastor, the Rev. Clementa Pinckney.…
Kenji Yoshino argues in his essay covering: The hidden assault on our civil rights “Civil rights has always been to permit people to pursue the human flourishing without limitation based on bias Focusing on law prevents us from seeing the revolutionary breadth of that aspiration, as law has limited civil rights to particular groups.”(235). Kenji Yoshino has a great point, what still exist in our structural and economical world is inequality among different, gender, races, discrimination of race and culture and all other areas of society. This is important because to what extend are the lawmakers going to get involved. If lawmakers are going to keep ignoring their constituents than they’re not helping fight social inequality. Lawmakers are ignoring the actually needs and wants of their constituents.…
In her book Coming of Age in Mississippi, Anne Moody writes about her different experiences while growing up in the South as an African-American female during the 1950s and 1960s. Her various stories range from living on a plantation as a child, to working for Caucasian families as a teenager, and to fighting segregation laws publicly as an adult. As Anne grows from a naive child to a progressive adult, she gradually develops into a local leader for African-Americans and an activist in the Civil Rights Movement. Segregation in America at this time greatly affected the relationships between African-Americans and Caucasians. Most of the opinions and mindsets of the Caucasians who were perpetrating African-Americans resulted from the tradition of their ancestors who also looked down upon the opposite race. Throughout her memoir, Anne Moody narrates the seemingly hopeless battle concerning racial equality by sharing her personal journey to the end of segregation.…
Since the colonies were created in 1607, African-Americans were seen as property rather than human beings like everyone else. This is what initially established slavery and when that was ended on December 6th, 1865 it then proceeded to racial inequality. Racial Inequality has been recorded by having legal slavery, slave codes, allowing Jim Crow laws, and unjust Supreme Court cases such as Plessy Vs. Ferguson. The countless inequalities after slavery abruptly began in 1896 when segregation was labeled as legal when the ruling of Plessy vs. Ferguson which was when Homer Plessy sat in the wrong designated section for his race.…
There is a long history about blacks in Miami, including the earliest black pirates in 1640s, the Bahamian fishermen, the black escaped slaves from mainly Georgia in 1700’s, and the large group of blacks from Georgia and Alabama in the 1880s and 1890s. Segregation was the first challenge that the black communities of Miami had to face. Miami was incorporated as a city in 1896, as Henry Flagler extended his railroad to Miami. In the same year, the Overtown, used to be called colored town, was established, and it was exclusively for blacks. The railroad separated Overtown from rest of communities, but kept it close enough for blacks to get to work. It was highly segregated community so that blacks were not allowed to leave Overtown in the night.…
"There are no natural disasters, but a Mismanagement of natural phenomena." Extreme natural phenomena has always existed and it is precisely when human beings should protect goods and services that may be affected by these natural phenomena when we have a disaster. The tragedy of Katrina was not, in a fundamental sense, the product of the forces of nature, but of the Bush administration and the capitalist system in general. The Bush administration was unfit to govern. Although a big cyclone was expected long ago, sufficient preventive measures were not taken to minimize damage. This catastrophic event also demonstrated that the institutions of white supremacy and racism ideas are deeply intertwined with the system of capitalism in America.…
These cities have a broad demographic ranging from people struggling financially to very wealthy entrepreneurs. Unfortunately people who have a lower socioeconomic status are the only ones affected negatively by this process. Moreover, these people are forced out of their homes due to the drastic increase in rent prices. David R.Jones states that for the bottom 20 percent of the population, rent prices have risen 30 percent faster than their income. The median pay for the bottom 30 percent is $30,000 a year, the median rent for an average 1 bedroom apartment is $1,000 a month. The people in this situation are paying rent that accounts for 40% of their income. Furthermore, these people are gentrified out of their apartments due to ridiculous rent prices. Then homeowners raise the rent again, but this time to $1,500 a month. Next, new people move in making the same $30,000 a year salary but this time their rent is raised $500. This absurd amount of money accounts for a whopping 60% of their total salary. These conditions are unbelievable and this is what happens everyday in large…
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.…
What do we think causes these housing and income problems? The answer is unemployment and unaffordable housing all of which stems from one root; with poverty. This also stems from the fact that over a third of adults in East Harlem have a college degree; however, a high percentage (26%) has not completed high school and this causes poverty and unemployment issues Statistics shows that about one in eight East Harlem adults ages 16 and older are unemployed, and nearly half of residents spend more than 30% of their monthly gross income on rent which puts them below the poverty line. The median household income is around $30,000 compared to the benchmark median around $55,000 for all of New York City, (Goodman, 2013). East Harlem has a greater percentage of residents living below the poverty which is twice as high as in Manhattan and New York City overall (Community Health Profiles, 2006, p.…
The year 1959 was a year that New Orleans, Louisiana advanced in growth and population. At this time, New Orleans started becoming more Americanized with the impression of growing, suburban areas. After the Caucasians and the African Americans integrated, the culture of New Orleans expanded even more. Also, the crime rate in the city was so minor; it was nothing like the way it is today. Families all over thought that New Orleans would be a considerable place to live safely, earn an education, be successful, and happily live their lives. Most households from around the world chose to live in New Orleans to get away from where they were raised. They wanted to live in a peaceful, friendly, and an inspiring place. Since the city was rapidly expanding, road…