Brain Drain and Brain Gain: Rising Educational Segregation in the United States, 1940–2000

The post‐industrialization of the American economy, combined with the expansion of American higher education, has created a new form of residential segregation. This paper examines recent trends in residential segregation between college graduates and high school graduates, demonstrating that America's educational geography became increasingly uneven between 1940 and 2000. During this period, educational inequality between American census divisions, metropolitan areas, counties, and census tracts increased dramatically. This trend is independent of recent developments in racial and economic segregation. Segregation between the highly educated and the less educated increased dramatically in the late 20th century, even as racial segregation declined, and economic segregation changed very little.

[1]  R. Florida The Economic Geography of Talent , 2002 .

[2]  D. Massey,et al.  The changing geographic structure of black-white segregation in the United States. , 1995 .

[3]  Manuel Castells,et al.  THE INFORMATIONAL CITY , 1991 .

[4]  D. Massey,et al.  The Ecology of Inequality: Minorities and the Concentration of Poverty, 1970-1980 , 1990, American Journal of Sociology.

[5]  Edgar M. Hoover,et al.  Interstate Redistribution of Population, 1850–1940 , 1941, The Journal of Economic History.

[6]  R. Sampson,et al.  ASSESSING "NEIGHBORHOOD EFFECTS": Social Processes and New Directions in Research , 2002 .

[7]  T. Clark 3. URBAN AMENITIES: LAKES, OPERA, AND JUICE BARS: DO THEY DRIVE DEVELOPMENT? , 2003 .

[8]  D. Massey,et al.  The Spatial Concentration of Affluence and Poverty during the 1970s , 1993 .

[9]  M. Castells The rise of the network society , 1996 .

[10]  N. Denton,et al.  The Dimensions of Residential Segregation , 1988 .

[11]  William H. Frey,et al.  Center on Urban and Metropolitan Policy , 2004 .

[12]  William H. Frey,et al.  Changes in the segregation of whites from blacks during the 1980s: small steps toward a more integrated society. , 1994 .

[13]  Eric J. Hobsbawm,et al.  The Age of Extremes , 1994 .

[14]  T. Clark,et al.  The city as an entertainment machine , 2001 .

[15]  P. Jargowsky A Measure of Spatial Segregation : The Generalized Neighborhood Sorting Index , 2005 .

[16]  James E. Rauch,et al.  Productivity Gains from Geographic Concentration of Human Capital: Evidence from the Cities , 1991 .

[17]  P. Dreier,et al.  Economic Inequality and Public Policy: The Power of Place , 2002 .

[18]  Greg J. Duncan,et al.  Do Neighborhoods Influence Child and Adolescent Development? , 1993, American Journal of Sociology.

[19]  Mary J. Fischer,et al.  The Geography of Inequality in the United States, 1950-2000 , 2003 .

[20]  Paul A. Jargowsky,et al.  Take the money and run: economic segregation in U.S. metropolitan areas. , 1996 .

[21]  A Piece of the Pie: Blacks and White Immigrants Since 1880 , 1981 .

[22]  R. Florida The Rise of the Creative Class , 2002 .

[23]  W. Frey Migration and depopulation of the metropolis: regional restructuring or rural renaissance? , 1987 .

[24]  Kurt J. Bauman,et al.  Educational Attainment: 2000. Census 2000 Brief. , 2003 .

[25]  O. D. Duncan,et al.  A METHODOLOGICAL ANALYSIS OF SEGREGATION INDEXES , 1955 .

[26]  Stanley Lieberson,et al.  An Asymmetrical Approach to Segregation , 1981 .

[27]  Otis Dudley Duncan,et al.  Statistical Geography: Problems in Analyzing Areal Data. , 1961 .

[28]  J. Brooks-Gunn,et al.  The neighborhoods they live in: the effects of neighborhood residence on child and adolescent outcomes. , 2000, Psychological bulletin.

[29]  S. Lieberson,et al.  Temporal Changes and Urban Differences in Residential Segregation: A Reconsideration , 1982, American Journal of Sociology.

[30]  Mitchell Moss,et al.  Technology and Cities , 1999 .

[31]  L. Pil The Rise of the Creative Class , 2004 .