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From Brown to
Busing (with Nora Gordon, Ethan Lewis, and
Sarah Reber). Journal of Urban Economics, 64(2), September 2008, 296-325. |
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Abstract: Brown v. Board of Education had little immediate effect on the dual system
of education in the South; by the early 1970s, however, Southern schools were
the most racially integrated in the country.
This paper uses newly assembled and uniquely comprehensive data to
document how different types of Southern school districts made this
transition. Controlling for other factors, we find larger districts were more
likely to be under court supervision both early and ever; over time the
enrollment threshold for court supervision fell. Poorer districts—which stood
to lose larger federal grants if they failed to desegregate—were particularly
likely to desegregate between 1964 and 1968. Black enrollment share did not
impede “token” desegregation, but was an important predictor of both
resistance to intensive desegregation and being supervised by a court in
later years. By the end of our sample, in 1976, districts in |
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Pre-publication version (January
2008) |
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