Title: Poverty
 1Poverty  Society
- Rank Chapter 6 Will Not Discuss 
- Pretty straightforwardwill integrate where 
 appropriate
- Have not finished grading these RQ 
- Reflection Return and Exam 
- Cant give backcome up for grade 
- Will go over the whole exam when all have taken 
 it
- Fundraising/Campus Visit 
- William Julius Wilson, When Work Disappears 
- The Great Migration 
- Deindustrialization 
- Suburbanization of Work 
- Social Organization 
2Exam 1
- Median Score was between an A-/B 
- A 5 
- A- 2 
- B 0 
- B 2 
- B- 1 
- C 1 
- C 1 
- C- 0 
- D 1 
- D 1 
- F 3 
- What to say 
- Most of you did very wella few are struggling 
- Exam was worth 20 of your grade 
- 40 of your grade is determined by the questions 
- If youre not doing them, or not taking them 
 seriouslyyoure making a mistake
3Fundraising and a Trip to Campus
- For each task you volunteer for and complete, 
 Ill give ¼ point on your assignment grade
- A moderator to facilitate discussion 
- Fundraising Ideas 
- Things to gets Crayons/markers, puzzles, 
 backpacks, supplies, jump ropes
- Ways to get them Back pack drive (Gerald), 
 donation boxes, bake sale (Lisa), candy sale
 (Selena) Spare change dorm storming
- Outreach SGA (Bernard) ROTC (John) 
- Trip to Campus 
- Spring Carnival (Snow) Field trip, Basketball 
 game movie
4Rank Understanding Poverty
- Structural forces ensure that there will be 
 losers in the first place (unemployment, bad
 jobs, weak safety net)individual characteristics
 help explain who loses
5Concentrated Poverty
- A question for people living and working in 
 Chester, Why do places like Chester (Philly,
 Camden, Cleveland, Chicago, etc.)
 generate/possess so many losers of the economic
 game?
- Big questionwith a complicated 
 answerConcentrated Poverty results from several
 factors, including past government policies,
 racial and ethnic discrimination, residential
 segregation, economic changes and employment
 dislocations, the movement of prosperous
 residents to the suburbs, and finally other, less
 definable social and cultural forces. (Iceland,
 p.57)
- There is a lot in that sentence 
- I want to unpack it and teach you about it 
6William Julius Wilson
- Major Scholar in area of urban poverty 
- The Declining Significance of Race 
- The Truly Disadvantaged 
- When Work Disappears 
- More than Just Race Being Black and Poor in the 
 Inner City (2008)
7Understanding Urban Black Poverty
- 1890, approximately 4 million Blacks in America 
 90 in Southanyone know anything about what
 theyre doing? How this map changes?
8Integration of Blacks into US Economy
- Approximately 4 Million Landless Freed Blacks 
- Land still controlled by White 
- Despite promises of 40 acres and a mule 
- 1880 GA 
- Blacks were 40 of population 
- Blacks owned 1.6 of the land 
- Plantation Owners Still Require Labor? 
- Blacks need access to make a living? 
- How might these needs be met? 
9Sharecropping?
- Blacks rented a plot of land and paid the 
 plantation owner a certain proportion of the
 cotton crop
- Plantation owners advance seed, mule, tools, 
 credit
- Blacks repaid these debts with a share of their 
 cotton production
- Share the crop 
10Sharecropping
- Soas European Americans (Irish, Italians, Jews, 
 Russians, Poles, etc) are entering the industrial
 economy and beginning the inter-generational
 journey from poverty to middle class
- Blacks are bound to the land as virtual slaves 
- Debt Peonage 
- insolvent blacks, unable to repay debt from one 
 year to another, were required by law to work
 indefinitely for the plantation owner to pay off
 debt
111890, Blacks in America 
 12Then Things ChangesThe Great Migration North 
Why the jump in the teens  20s? 
 13The Great Migration
  14The Great Migration North Why the 1940s jump? 
 15The Great Migration PA
-  1930 70 of Pennsylvanias Black Population was 
 born somewhere else
- 19 Virginia 
- 13 South Carolina 
- 11 Georgia 
16Philly The Great Migration     
 17Great MigrationBlacks Become an Urban Population
US North 
Rural Urban Rural Urban
1890 80 20 38 62
1920 66 34 16 84
1950 38 62 7 93
1970 19 81 3 97 
 18Poverty  Society
- Fundraising/Campus Visit 
- William Julius Wilson, When Work Disappears 
- The Great Migration 
- Deindustrialization 
- Suburbanization of Work 
- Social Organization 
19Fundraising and a Trip to Campus
- For each task you volunteer for and complete, 
 Ill give ¼ point on your assignment grade
- Fundraising new information or loose ends 
- Trip to Campus 
- Spring Carnival (Snow)the date? 
20Great MigrationBlacks Become an Urban Population
US North 
Rural Urban Rural Urban
1890 80 20 38 62
1920 66 34 16 84
1950 38 62 7 93
1970 19 81 3 97 
 21The Urban Ghetto
- Wilson refers to Institutional ghettoes that 
 are segregatedbut day to day activities more or
 less mirror larger society
- Note Video from the Promised Land 
- 2) At the beginning of the video, the Black 
 Ghetto in Chicago is described as the Capitol of
 Black America. Briefly describe the world that
 is depicted?
22Great Migration and American CultureA digression
- Soundtrack of video full of Blues 
- Black acoustic music migrates up Mississippi with 
 Migration
- Mississippi Delta Blues 
- Travel on Highway 61Famous Dylan album 
- Early Rolling Stones album had many credited 
 blues covers
- Early Led Zeppelin albums had many non credited 
 blues covers
- Willie Dixon sued Led Zeppelin because Whole 
 lotta love was so similar to You need
 love.settled out of court
23The Great Migration North The main pull factor?
- Early this semester we noted In a capitalist 
 society, a persons well being/standard of living
 will primarily be determined by their
 participation in the labor market.
- So why do I bother to review the Great Migration? 
 How do you think it impacted the rate of black
 poverty?
24The Great MigrationBlacks Enter Urban Labor 
Markets
- By 1940, the occupational distribution of 
 transformed
- Similar to the peasants who had left Italy or 
 Poland in 1900 to become wage workers in America,
 Blacks left the land in the south  become modern
 wage workers
25Occupational Changes Reduce Poverty
  26The Great MigrationBlacks join the industrial 
working class
- By 1940, the occupational distribution of 
 transformed
- Blacks had joined the industrial working class 
- Four things to consider 
- 1) Blacks get manufacturing jobs a generation 
 after other groups intergenerational mobility
 delayed
27The Great MigrationBlacks join the industrial 
working class
- By 1940, the occupational distribution of 
 transformed
- Blacks had joined the industrial working class 
- Four things to consider 
- 1) Blacks get manufacturing jobs a generation 
 after other groups intergenerational mobility
 delayed
- 2) Blacks get manufacturing jobs, but as 2nd 
 class workers (lowest skilled, lowest paid)
 intragenerational mobility institutionally
 limited
28The Great MigrationBlacks join the industrial 
working class
- By 1940, the occupational distribution of 
 transformed
- Blacks had joined the industrial working class 
- Four things to consider 
- 1) Blacks get manufacturing jobs a generation 
 after other groups intergenerational mobility
 delayed
- 2) Blacks get manufacturing jobs, but as 2nd 
 class workers (lowest skilled, lowest paid)
 intra generational mobility institutionally
 limited
- 3) They will not get access to the better jobs 
 until the Civil Rights Act of 1965
- intra and inter generational mobility impacted 
- My Dad has already been working for years in a 
 job that openly discriminated
29The Great MigrationBlacks join the industrial 
working class
- By 1940, the occupational distribution of 
 transformed
- Blacks had joined the industrial working class 
- Four things to consider 
- 1) Blacks get manufacturing jobs a generation 
 after other groupsintergenerational mobility
 delayed
- 2) Blacks get manufacturing jobs, but as 2nd 
 class workers (lowest skilled, lowest
 paid)mobility institutionally limited
- 3) They will not get access to the better jobs 
 until the Civil Rights Act of 1965 intra and
 inter generational mobility impacted
- 4) What happens to Americas manufacturing jobs 
 starting in the 1970s?
- Wilsons focus 
30Occupational Changes Reduce Povertybut then 
work disappears 
 31Great Migration into Northern Ghettoes
- Institutional ghettoes are segregatedbut day to 
 day activities more or less mirror larger society
- You could walk out of the house and get a job. 
 Maybe not what you want but a you could get a
 job. Now you cant find anything. A lot of people
 in this neighborhood, they want to work but they
 cant get work (Wilson 1996 36).
32From Institutional Ghetto to Jobless Ghetto
- Economic Restructuring Hits Urban Black 
 Communities Very Hard
- As late as 1968-1970 period, more than 70 of 
 Blacks working metropolitan areas held blue
 collar jobs at the same time that 50 percent of
 all metropolitan workers held white collar jobs
 (Wilson 1996 31).
- More than ½ of these workers were in goods 
 producing industries
- Common saying When America gets a cold, Black 
 America gets pneumonia.
33De-industrializationJobless Ghettoes
-  The manufacturing losses in some northern 
 cities have been staggering(Wilson 1996 29)
- North Lawndale Neighborhood in Chicago loses 
 57,000 manufacturing jobs
- Manufacturing Jobs Lost Between 1967-1987 
-  Pct. Change Total Lost 
- Philadelphia 64 160,000 
- Chicago 60 500,000 
- New York 58 gt500,000 
- Detroit 51 108,000 
- Note video clip on Chester  on Blacks in the 
 Steel Industry
34Economic RestructuringJobless Ghettoes 
 35Occupational Shift within urban black community
- Chicago 
- 57 percent of Chicagos employed inner city 
 black fatherswho were born between 1950 and 1955
 worked in manufacturing and construction
 industries in 1974(Wilson 1996 30)
- By 1987 this was down to 31 percent 
- As a result, young black males have turned 
 increasingly to the low wage service sector and
 unskilled laboring jobs for employment, or have
 gone jobless(Wilson 1996 30)
- Philadelphia's Richard Allen Housing Project 
- 1945 54 of household breadwinners in 
 manufacturing
- 1960s 25 of household breadwinners in 
 manufacturing
- By the 1960s, more than 60 of breadwinners were 
 working as maids in department stores, laundry
 workers, orderlies and other service trades
36What of the remaining urban jobs 
 37What of the remaining urban jobs
- Consider ChesterLargest Employers are Widener 
 and Crozier Medical
- What kinds of occupations do these institutions 
 offer?
- What are the human capital requirements for these 
 occupations?
- Where do you think that most graduates of 
 Chesters school system will plug in?
-  
-  
38Sociologists Refer to this as the Skills 
Mismatch
- Skills mismatch  Urban Poverty 
- mismatch between the skills of many urban 
 residents and the skills required by higher wage
 parts of the new urban economy
- Wilson, p. 32 
- NYC lost 135,000 jobs requiring less than 12 
 years education while gaining 300,000 in
 industries requiring 13 years or more
- Philly lost 55,000 in low education industries 
 and gained 40,000 requiring HS plus some college
39William Julius Wilson
- Not just a skills mismatchWilson argues that 
 there is a growing mismatch between urban blacks
 and the suburban location of employment. In your
 own words, explain this problem. Be sure to a
 quote or statistic from the text to support your
 explanation.
- Wilson argues that there is a growing mismatch 
 between urban blacks and the suburban location of
 employment. In your own words, explain this
 problem. Be sure to incorporate a quote or
 statistic from the text to support your
 explanation.
-  In your own words, briefly describe what the 
 article 4-Hour Trek Across New York for 4 Hours
 of Work, and 28 was about.
40Urban population faced with suburban job growth
- Spatial Mismatch 
- The demand for labor has shifted away from 
 neighborhoods where blacks are concentrated in
 favor of suburban areas
- Chicago as an Example 
- 1970-1990, 60 of new jobs in Chicago area were 
 created in the Northern Suburbs
- Blacks are less than 2 of that populationyou 
 should be wondering why?
- By 1990, Chicago Accounted for just 37 of the 
 jobs in metro-region
41Another problemSuburbanization of Employment
- Donut Shaped DevelopmentShare of Jobs within 3, 
 10, gt 10 mile Radius of central city, 1996
42Another problemSuburbanization of Employment
- Share of Metropolitan Employment, 1999
43Spatial Mismatch Transit
- You read about a woman who commutes more than 2 
 hrs each way from Philly to the Suburbs for a
 7.25 job
- Reverse CommuteCity to suburb commute is often 
 tough
- In some cases, not even possible 
- Presence in suburbs can bring problems racial 
 harassment
44Gautreaux Program
- 5. Briefly describe the Gautreaux program. Why 
 was it initiated? What did it do? What did the
 research generated from this program find?
- Poverty due to a culture of poverty or 
 structural factors like lack of jobsThis program
 provides a nice test
- Anyone remember what it was? 
45Gautreaux Program
- Court ordered relocation of 4,000 people from 
 Chicago Public Housing to other areas of Greater
 Chicago
- Provided a Natural Experiment Two groups to 
 compare
- Researchers could contrast systematically the 
 experiences of low income blacks who had been
 assigned private apartments in the suburbs with
 the experience of a control group with similar
 characteristics and histories who had been
 assigned private apartments in the city (Wilson
 1996 38)
46A Simple Experiment
- Poor Urban Blacks ?Moved to Suburbs? Measure 
 Employment Status
- Poor Urban Black? Stay in city ? Measure 
 Employment Status
- The only thing that differed was the location 
- Culture was the same level of human, social and 
 cultural capital is initially the same
- What did they find? 
-  
47Study Findings
- After taking into account the personal 
 characteristics of the respondents (family
 background, family circumstances, levels of human
 capital, motivation, length of time since the
 respondent first enrolled in the Gautreaux
 program)found that those who moved to apartments
 in the suburbs were significantly more likely to
 have a job after the move than those placed in
 the city(Wison 1996 38)
- When asked whyrespondents said there were more 
 jobs.
- Findings support spatial mismatch theoryyet 
 another challenge to the idea that poverty is
 primarily about culture
- Raises interesting questions about housing policy 
48Joblessness Snowballs into other problems in the 
Ghetto
- Changes in the industrial and occupational mix, 
 including the removal of jobs from urban centers
 to suburban corridors, represents external
 factors that helped elevate joblessness among
 inner city blacks. But important social and
 demographic changes within the inner city are
 also associated with the escalating rates of
 neighborhood joblessness (Wilson 1996 42).
49Joblessness creates other problems
- Wilson notes that after 1960, certain types of 
 African Americans began to leave inner cities.
 Please describe who left the cities. Why do you
 think the departure of these people would have a
 negative effect on a community?
50ExodusMovement of the People
- Woodlawn on the South Side of Chicago 
- White Flight From 66 percent white in 1950 to 10 
 percent white in 1960
- After 1960, as sizable exodus of black residents 
 followed, including a significant number of
 working- and middle class families (Wilson 1996
 6).
- outmigration of non-poor black families(Wilson 
 1996 42)
- Population falls from 80,000 in 1960 to 24,473 in 
 1990
- How would the movement of working and middle 
 class families transform a neighborhood?
51Middle Class Exodus
- Loss of Black middle class impacts on social 
 capital
- Job networks erode 
- Reduces role models who stress importance of 
 school, career aspirations, etc.
- Teachers and social workers move outdrug dealers 
 move in
52Middle Class ExodusSmall Business Decline  
Neighborhoods Crumble
- Woodlawn on the South Side of Chicago 
- Business base erode from over 800 establishments 
 in 1950 to about a hundred today (Wilson 1996 5)
- Neighborhoods disintegrate 
- Excess housing stock leads land lords to abandon 
 houses
- Tax base erodes leading to cuts in services 
- Garbage collection Park maintenance Schools
53Joblessness  Middle Class Exodus Results in Lack 
of Social Organization
- Joblessness 
- Decrease in income 
- Change in structure and rhythm of everyday life 
- Impact on commercial businesses in neighborhood 
- Working and Middle Class Flight 
- Further erosion of commercial sector 
- Erosion of social capital (job networks) 
- Lack of role models 
- Population decline leads to abandoned housing 
- All Contributes to weakening of Social 
 Organization/Social Capital...and weakened Social
 Organization/Social Capital further feeds
 disintegration of neighborhood
54Now
- Fundraising and plans 
- NextSegregation and opportunity