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Are mixed neighborhoods always unstable? Two-sided and one-sided tipping
David Card
, Alexandre Mas
, Jesse Rothstein
Princeton School of Public and International Affairs
Research output
:
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
›
Chapter
8
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Scopus citations
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Keyphrases
Census Tract
100%
Mixed Neighbourhoods
100%
Racial Segregation
75%
White Family
75%
White Population
75%
Schelling
75%
Schelling Model
75%
Chicago
50%
Near-zero
50%
White People
50%
Three-City
50%
Cleveland
50%
Minority Families
50%
Social Interaction
25%
Detroit
25%
African American
25%
United States
25%
Hereafter
25%
Histogram
25%
Public Policy
25%
20th Century
25%
Multiple Equilibria
25%
Knife-edge
25%
Social Science Research
25%
Planners
25%
Original Model
25%
US Cities
25%
Worse Outcome
25%
Workplace
25%
Mixed Equilibrium
25%
Racial Minorities
25%
Long-run Effects
25%
Later Years
25%
Defining Characteristic
25%
Modern History
25%
Common Understanding
25%
Inherent Instability
25%
Hispanic Population
25%
Crime Rate
25%
Policy Means
25%
Ethnic Composition
25%
Historical Experience
25%
Exodus
25%
Weak Preferences
25%
Racial-ethnic
25%
Marriage Rate
25%
Large Cities
25%
Institutional Forces
25%
Neighborhood Schools
25%
Minority Status
25%
Northern Cities
25%
Ethnic Diversity
25%
Racial Diversity
25%
High Crime
25%
Black Neighborhoods
25%
Segregated Area
25%
Black children
25%
Market Forces
25%
Cross-sectional Distribution
25%
Urban Neighborhoods
25%
Major Metropolitan Areas
25%
Temporary Equilibrium
25%
Integration Policy
25%
Jim Crow
25%
Legal Force
25%
Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Flight
100%
Americans
50%
African
50%
Public Policy
50%
Hispanics
50%
Knives
50%
Corvus
50%
Economics, Econometrics and Finance
Temporary Equilibrium
100%