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Competition In The Promised Land Black Migrants In Northern Cities And Labor Markets Leah Platt Boustan

  • SKU: BELL-51944484
Competition In The Promised Land Black Migrants In Northern Cities And Labor Markets Leah Platt Boustan
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Competition In The Promised Land Black Migrants In Northern Cities And Labor Markets Leah Platt Boustan instant download after payment.

Publisher: Princeton University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.2 MB
Pages: 216
Author: Leah Platt Boustan
ISBN: 9781400882977, 1400882974
Language: English
Year: 2016

Product desciption

Competition In The Promised Land Black Migrants In Northern Cities And Labor Markets Leah Platt Boustan by Leah Platt Boustan 9781400882977, 1400882974 instant download after payment.

From 1940 to 1970, nearly four million black migrants left the American rural South to settle in the industrial cities of the North and West. Competition in the Promised Land provides a comprehensive account of the long-lasting effects of the influx of black workers on labor markets and urban space in receiving areas.


Traditionally, the Great Black Migration has been lauded as a path to general black economic progress. Leah Boustan challenges this view, arguing instead that the migration produced winners and losers within the black community. Boustan shows that migrants themselves gained tremendously, more than doubling their earnings by moving North. But these new arrivals competed with existing black workers, limiting black–white wage convergence in Northern labor markets and slowing black economic growth. Furthermore, many white households responded to the black migration by relocating to the suburbs. White flight was motivated not only by neighborhood racial change but also by the desire on the part of white residents to avoid participating in the local public services and fiscal obligations of increasingly diverse cities.


Employing historical census data and state-of-the-art econometric methods, Competition in the Promised Land revises our understanding of the Great Black Migration and its role in the transformation of American society.

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