Crime and Urban Form
Volume 13 Number 3
Visualizing Racial Segregation Differently: Exploring Geographic Patterns in Context
Ronald E. Wilson, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
Graphic Detail
Geographic Information Systems organize and clarify the patterns of human activities
on the earth’s surface and their interaction with each other. GIS data, in the form of maps,
can quickly and powerfully convey relationships to policymakers and the public. This
department of Cityscape includes maps that convey important housing or community
development policy issues or solutions. If you have made such a map and are willing to
share it in a future issue of Cityscape, please contact david.e.chase@hud.gov.
Visualizing geographical patterns of racial segregation is often done by mapping a proportion of a single racial group. The single proportion method, however, does not provide a context for understanding the social or economic conditions that interact with the pattern. This article is the second of two that examines segregation at the regional level. The previous article (Wilson, 2011) shows how to map two racial groups simultaneously to provide a comparative context for integration and regional segregation. The purpose of the analysis in this article is to move the reader beyond examining segregation with a single percentage map of one racial group without some comparative context. Not providing a comparison allows a reader to be misguided as to whether real problems exist. This article recasts the analysis of segregation to the interaction of the economic context with geographic patterns of segregation.
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