Hipp, John R. and Jae Hong Kim. (2023). “Persistent Racial Diversity in Neighborhoods: What Explains it and what are the Long-term Consequences?Urban Geography.  44(4): 640-667.

Abstract: “We explore neighborhoods in Southern California from 1980 to 2010 that exhibit persistent racial diversity (PRD) and the consequences of this PRD. Initial exploratory analyses show that the racial composition of the area surrounding the neighborhood in 1980 is associated with which neighborhoods become PRDs. Our primary analyses compare how PRD neighborhoods change over time (1980–2010) based on several socio-demographic measures to a matched group of non-PRD neighborhoods that had similar characteristics in 1980. The key finding is that PRD neighborhoods improved more on per capita income and percent in poverty compared to their matched tracts from 1980 to 2010. We also found that there was not a single route to persistent diversity, but rather a myriad of pathways through which racial/ethnic diversity can persist over a long time period at the neighborhood level.”