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Steven Gunkel - "From Old South to New South"

Steven Gunkel, associate professor of SociologySteven E. Gunkel, associate professor of Sociology, co-wrote an article titled "From Old South to New South? Black-White Residential Segregation in Micropolitan Areas." with Ana-María González Wahl (assistant professor of sociology at Wake Forest University) published in Sociological Spectrum, Volume 27, Issue 5, September 2007. 

Abstract:   

This article examines black-white residential segregation in micropolitan areas across the South.  Micropolitan areas are newly defined urban clusters with a core population that ranges from 10,000 to 50,000. By shifting the focus to the nonmetropolitan South, we take debates about the "American dilemma" back to a historically important terrain of black-white relations that few scholars have systematically examined in the post-Civil Rights era. Using the most recent census, we find that the dynamics of residential segregation in our sample of micropolitan areas reflect both important opportunities and constraints.  In contrast to their counterparts in metropolitan areas, blacks in the nonmetropolitan South face "only" moderate levels of segregation.  Surprisingly, southern micropolitan areas afford greater opportunities for spatial assimilation to the least economically advantaged blacks as well as those who are more advantaged.  Perhaps most importantly, this finding holds for micropolitan areas located in the historic Black Belt as well as elsewhere; however, several patterns emerge that suggest a set of barriers to spatial assimilation similar to those facing African Americans in metropolitan areas.  In sum, our analysis clarifies the complexities of black-white segregation in the "New South/Old South," pushing scholars to more systematically map the distinct trajectories of "American Apartheid" across time and place in the United States.   

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