Volume 40 - Article 33 | Pages 963–974
The residential segregation of the American Indian and Alaska Native population in US metropolitan and micropolitan areas, 2010
By Jack Byerly
References
Bennett, P.R. (2011). The social position of multiracial groups in the United States: Evidence from residential segregation. Ethnic and Racial Studies 34(4): 707–729.
Davis, J.J., Roscigno, V.J., and Wilson, G. (2016). American Indian poverty in the contemporary United States. Sociological Forum 31(1): 5–28.
Ellis, M., Holloway, S.R., Wright, R., and Fowler, C.S. (2012). Agents of change: Mixed-race households and the dynamics of neighborhood segregation in the United States. Annals of the Association of American Geographers 102(3): 549–570.
Fixico, D.L. (2000). The urban Indian experience in America. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.
Huyser, K.R., Sakamoto, A., and Takei, I. (2010). The persistence of racial disadvantage: The socioeconomic attainments of single-race and multi-race Native Americans. Population Research and Policy Review 29(4): 541–568.
Huyser, K.R., Takei, I., and Sakamoto, A. (2014). Demographic factors associated with poverty among American Indians and Alaska Natives. Race and Social Problems 6(2): 120–134.
Iceland, J., Weinberg, H., and Steinmetz, E. (2002). Racial and ethnic residential segregation in the United States: 1980–2000. Washington, D.C.: US Census Bureau (CENSR-3).
Lee, B.A., Reardon, S.F., Firebaugh, G., Farrell, C.R., Matthews, S.A., and O’Sullivan, D. (2008). Beyond the census tract: Patterns and determinants of racial segregation at multiple geographic scales. American Sociological Review 73(5): 766–791.
Lichter, D.T., Parisi, D., Grice, S.M., and Taquino, M.C. (2007). National estimates of racial segregation in rural and small-town America. Demography 44(3): 563–581.
Liebler, C., Bhaskar, R., and Porter, S.R. (2016). Joining, leaving, and staying in the American Indian/Alaska Native race category between 2000 and 2010. Demography 53(2): 507–540.
Liebler, C. and Ortyl, T. (2014). More than one million new American Indians in 2000: Who are they? Demography 51(3): 1101–1130.
Light, M.T. and Iceland, J. (2016). The social context of racial boundary negotiations: Segregation, hate crime, and Hispanic racial identification in metropolitan America. Sociological Science 3(4): 61–84.
Massey, D.S. and Denton, N.A. (1988). The dimensions of residential segregation. Social Forces 67(2): 281–315.
Norris, T., Vines, P., and Hoeffel, E. (2012). The American Indian and Alaska Native population: 2010. Washington, D.C.: US Census Bureau (C2010BR-10).
Passel, J.S. (1997). The growing American Indian population, 1960–1990: Beyond demography. Population Research and Policy Review 16(1–2): 11–31.
Reardon, S.F. and Townsend, J.B. (2018). SEG: Stata module to compute multiple-group diversity and segregation indices [electronic resource]. Boston: Boston College Department of Economics.
Roberto, E. and Hwang, J. (2017). Barriers to integration: Institutionalized boundaries and the spatial structure of residential segregation. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Population Association of America, Chicago, Illinois, April 27–29, 2017.
Rugh, J. and Massey, D. (2014). Segregation in post-civil rights America: Stalled integration or end of the segregated century? Du Bois Review 11(2): 205–232.
Snipp, C.M. (1989). American Indians: The first of this land. New York: Russell Sage.
Snipp, C.M. (1992). Sociological perspectives on American Indians. Annual Review of Sociology 17: 351–371.
Thornton, R. (1997). Tribal membership requirements and the demography of ‘old’ and ‘new’ Native Americans. Population Research and Policy Review 16(1–2): 33–42.
Wilkes, R. (2003). The residential segregation of Native Americans in US metropolitan areas. Sociological Focus 36(2): 127–142.
Wilkes, R. and Iceland, J. (2004). Hypersegregation in the twenty-first century. Demography 41(1): 23–36.