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  #3981  
Old Posted Jun 1, 2023, 4:03 PM
Crawford Crawford is offline
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Originally Posted by UrbanRevival View Post
Also, generally Western in US geographical terms, meaning much younger housing development and much less of an entrenched history with redlining practices.
Probably, but the pretty clear variable is % AA. Heavily black metros, especially heavily black metros with large white working class, will have higher segregation. Redlining hasn't been a thing for at least 50 years.
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  #3982  
Old Posted Jun 1, 2023, 4:04 PM
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Originally Posted by mhays View Post
Go Pacific Northwest!

This has been obvious for a long time. Look at any dot map. There's still segregation, but much less than most regions.
You mean whitelandia? It seems there’s a certain nuance missing from this… in that, if your city is more white than the national average then it’s more segregated than the national average even if the non-white population is not limited to one part of town. The fact that the white population is so high in those cities is not just by happenstance.
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  #3983  
Old Posted Jun 1, 2023, 4:06 PM
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Originally Posted by iheartthed View Post

Timing might also be a factor for why the UK cities diverge so much from US cities. UK cities got the bulk of their non-white immigration late enough to learn from missteps in the US. Canada, which receive the bulk of its non-white immigration in parallel to the UK, will probably look more similar to the UK than the US.
UK nonwhites tend to be South Asian. The U.S. dissimilarity index between whites and South Asians is minimal.
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  #3984  
Old Posted Jun 1, 2023, 4:07 PM
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Originally Posted by Klippenstein View Post
You mean whitelandia? It seems there’s a certain nuance missing from this… in that, if your city is more white than the national average then it’s more segregated than the national average even if the non-white population is not limited to one part of town. The fact that the white population is so high in those cities is not just by happenstance.
Yeah, Oregon literally banned Black people from settling there in the state constitution lol. But as I pointed out above, it's also timing of the city's growth.
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  #3985  
Old Posted Jun 1, 2023, 4:09 PM
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Originally Posted by Crawford View Post
UK nonwhites tend to be South Asian. The U.S. dissimilarity index between whites and South Asians is minimal.
South Asians did not migrate until mostly after the Civil Rights movement. They were banned from migrating to the US until the 1940s. Migration for educational purposes mostly started in the 1950s, which is how both Kamala Harris's parents (South Asian and Jamaican) and Barack Obama's father (Kenyan) came to the U.S.
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  #3986  
Old Posted Jun 1, 2023, 4:56 PM
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Black-White Index of Dissimilarity (Black % of MSA)

New York 73 (16.2%)
Los Angeles 59.7 (7.1%)
Chicago 71.5 (17.1%)
Dallas 51.6 (16.8%)
Houston 57.2 (18%)
Washington 58.4 (26%)
Philadelphia 63.3 (21.4%)
Atlanta 58.5 (35%)
Miami 62 (19.9%)
Phoenix 41.1 (6.7%)
Boston 57.4 (8.5%)
Riverside 41.8 (8.1%)
San Francisco 55.1 (8.1%)
Detroit 69.4 (23.2%)
Seattle 42.4 (7.8%)
Minneapolis 47.7 (10.6%)
Tampa 49.6 (12.7%)
San Diego 44.8 (5.6%)
Denver 54 (6.5%)
Baltimore 51 (30.1%)
St. Louis 67.4 (19.3%)

https://s4.ad.brown.edu/projects/div...aspx?msa=16740
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  #3987  
Old Posted Jun 1, 2023, 5:04 PM
Docere Docere is offline
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Originally Posted by Klippenstein View Post
You mean whitelandia? It seems there’s a certain nuance missing from this… in that, if your city is more white than the national average then it’s more segregated than the national average even if the non-white population is not limited to one part of town. The fact that the white population is so high in those cities is not just by happenstance.
Portland MSA is only 4% Black, just about the lowest percentage of any major American city. Even Seattle - not very Black by US standards - is noticeably much blacker.
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  #3988  
Old Posted Jun 1, 2023, 5:22 PM
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Originally Posted by Crawford View Post
Probably, but the pretty clear variable is % AA. Heavily black metros, especially heavily black metros with large white working class, will have higher segregation. Redlining hasn't been a thing for at least 50 years.
De jure red-lining has been gone for over 5 decades, but many legacy cities are still living with the fall-out from de facto red-lining due to the way the practice baked-in a lot of these residential patterns.

% black is obviously a big part of the equation too, but I strongly suspect that metro areas that have a higher % of their development from before 1960 have higher levels of black/white segregation.

Just compare legacy metros like NYC and Chicago against newer Sunbelt metros like Dallas and Houston.

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Originally Posted by Docere View Post
Black-White Index of Dissimilarity (Black % of MSA)

New York 73 (16.2%)
Chicago 71.5 (17.1%)
Dallas 51.6 (16.8%)
Houston 57.2 (18%)

Very similar overall percentages of blacks at the metro level, but significantly different black/white segregation index scores.
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  #3989  
Old Posted Jun 1, 2023, 5:28 PM
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I can see this, though Dallas and Houston don't really have legacy working class white populations. They're mostly newer sprawl, which is a different ballgame. There isn't much to segregate. There are white majority in-town favored quarter-type areas, almost 100% nonwhite poor-working class areas, and then a crapload of sprawl, with varying levels of diversity, though usually pretty high.

And these towns are so transient. There aren't fourth generation neighborhood cranks angry about the newcomers. Neighborhoods turn over in 20 years. There are Texas slum areas that were first developed in the 1980's. In the North, anything post-WW2 is considered pretty new. And the old northern cities are so rooted.

There's a block of Italians in the Gowanus neighborhood in Brooklyn that seem to be reenacting 1940's NYC. They're playing stickball and sitting all day on stoops smoking cigars. Meanwhile, the surrounding blocks were gentrified decades ago, and probably haven't been Italian since the 70's. Even today, I'm not sure these families would sell to outsiders. Outside of NOLA, this weirdness doesn't happen in the Sunbelt.
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  #3990  
Old Posted Jun 1, 2023, 5:46 PM
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Originally Posted by Crawford View Post
I can see this, though Dallas and Houston don't really have legacy working class white populations.
Right, and the reason for this is that, relatively speaking, Dallas and Houston were pretty small places back when the white ethnic working class dominated cities like NYC and Chicago (who then subsequently had one of the biggest demographic conniption fits in history during the great migration).

There was just so much more of NYC and Chicago that existed back in the red-lining era, such that they have so much more of that era's legacy still clinging to them like a bad rash that won't go away.
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Last edited by Steely Dan; Jun 2, 2023 at 3:40 AM.
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  #3991  
Old Posted Jun 2, 2023, 3:31 AM
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Originally Posted by Klippenstein View Post
You mean whitelandia? It seems there’s a certain nuance missing from this… in that, if your city is more white than the national average then it’s more segregated than the national average even if the non-white population is not limited to one part of town. The fact that the white population is so high in those cities is not just by happenstance.
What you are saying:

White flight no longer takes the character of whites (with means) leaving a core city and decamping to the suburbs of that same city; white flight now takes the character of whites (with means) leaving one city (usually with more racial issues and a larger, more politically minority population) and moving to another altogether (usually with less racial issues, and a smaller less politically powerful minority population).

The old white flight versus the new white flight.

The best examples of these cities are Portland, Austin, Denver, Seattle, and Nashville (ish).

Yaaaaaaas call them out.
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HTOWN: 2305k (+10%) + MSA suburbs: 4818k (+26%) + CSA exurbs: 190k (+6%)
BIGD: 1304k (+9%) + MSA div. suburbs: 3826k (+26%) + adj. CSA exurbs: 394k (+8%)
FTW: 919k (+24%) + MSA div. suburbs: 1589k (+14%) + adj. CSA exurbs: 90k (+12%)
SATX: 1435k (+8%) + MSA suburbs: 1124k (+38%) + CSA exurbs: 18k (+11%)
ATX: 962k (+22%) + MSA suburbs: 1322k (+43%)
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  #3992  
Old Posted Jun 2, 2023, 3:41 AM
wwmiv wwmiv is offline
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Originally Posted by Docere View Post
Black-White Index of Dissimilarity (Black % of MSA)

New York 73 (16.2%)
Chicago 71.5 (17.1%)
Detroit 69.4 (23.2%)
St. Louis 67.4 (19.3%)
Philadelphia 63.3 (21.4%)
Miami 62 (19.9%)
Los Angeles 59.7 (7.1%)
Atlanta 58.5 (35%)
Washington 58.4 (26%)
Boston 57.4 (8.5%)
Houston 57.2 (18%)
San Francisco 55.1 (8.1%)
Denver 54 (6.5%)
Dallas 51.6 (16.8%)
Baltimore 51 (30.1%)
Tampa 49.6 (12.7%)
Minneapolis 47.7 (10.6%)
San Diego 44.8 (5.6%)
Seattle 42.4 (7.8%)
Riverside 41.8 (8.1%)
Phoenix 41.1 (6.7%)
Re-ordered by their dissimilarity index. Only very loosely correlated, and likely not statistically significant once accounting for other variables discussed above (region, age, historical size, etc).
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HTOWN: 2305k (+10%) + MSA suburbs: 4818k (+26%) + CSA exurbs: 190k (+6%)
BIGD: 1304k (+9%) + MSA div. suburbs: 3826k (+26%) + adj. CSA exurbs: 394k (+8%)
FTW: 919k (+24%) + MSA div. suburbs: 1589k (+14%) + adj. CSA exurbs: 90k (+12%)
SATX: 1435k (+8%) + MSA suburbs: 1124k (+38%) + CSA exurbs: 18k (+11%)
ATX: 962k (+22%) + MSA suburbs: 1322k (+43%)
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  #3993  
Old Posted Jun 2, 2023, 4:17 AM
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The top five are older eastern cities (St. Louis I guess is technically not eastern but seems more like one).

Southern cities are less segregated than the older northern and eastern cities.

The western cities have the lowest black percentages and the lowest segregation.
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  #3994  
Old Posted Jun 2, 2023, 10:01 PM
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Originally Posted by wwmiv View Post
The best examples of these cities are Portland, Austin, Denver, Seattle, and Nashville (ish).
Austin, Denver and Nashville absolutely.

But Portland's NHW growth last decade wasn't particularly strong, and Seattle surprisingly shrank on the measure.



1M+ US MSAs by NH-white population change 2010 -2020 (total MSA growth in parenthesis)

Riverside: -12.4 (+8.9)
San Jose: -11.2 (+8.9)
Hartford: -10.7 (+0.1)
Fresno: -10.7 (+8.4)
Memphis: -9.1 (+1.6)
Miami: -7.9 (+10.3)
Baltimore: -7.8 (+4.9)
Chicago: -7.3 (+1.7)
Los Angeles: -7.3 (+2.9)
San Francisco: -6.6 (+9.5)
Rochester: -6.4 (+1.0)
Milwaukee: -5.9 (+1.2)
Providence: -5.8 (+4.7)
Buffalo: -5.7 (+2.8)
Tulsa: -5.7 (+8.3)
New York: -5.6 (+6.6)
Cleveland: -5.5 (+0.5)
San Diego: -5.2 (+6.6)
St. Louis: -5.1 (+1.2)
Pittsburgh: -5.0 (+0.6)
Philadelphia: -4.8 (+4.7)
Las Vegas: -4.6 (+16.1)
Virginia Beach: -4.2 (+5.0)
Detroit: -4.0 (+2.2)
New Orleans: -3.8 (+6.9)
Boston: -3.4 (+8.5)
Honolulu: -3.4 (+6.6)
Sacramento: -3.4 (+11.6)
Washington: -2.2 (+13.0)
Louisville: -2.1 (+6.9)
Cincinnati: -1.9 (+5.6)
Birmingham: -1.5 (+5.1)
Tucson: -0.9 (+6.4)
Atlanta: -0.8 (+15.2)
Seattle: -0.5 (+16.8)

Oklahoma City: +0.1 (+13.8)
Tampa: +0.5 (+14.1)
Kansas City: +0.7 (+9.1)
Minneapolis: +0.8 (+10.7)
Indianapolis: +1.1 (+11.8)
Columbus: +1.4 (+12.5)
Portland: +1.7 (+12.9)
Dallas: +2.2 (+20.0)
Orlando: +2.2 (+25.3)
Houston: +2.5 (+20.3)
Grand Rapids: +3.0 (+9.5)
Richmond: +3.2 (+10.8)
Phoenix: +5.6 (+15.6)
Salt Lake City: +5.9 (+15.6)
Charlotte: +6.6 (+18.6)
Jacksonville: +7.7 (+19.3)
Denver: +8.4 (+16.5)
San Antonio: +8.4 (+19.4)
Nashville: +11.6 (+20.9)
Raleigh: +14.9 (+25.1)
Austin: +20.7 (+33.0)

source: https://www.brookings.edu/wp-content..._-Populati.pdf


For an interesting intra-state take on this movement, just look at Nashville and Memphis on complete opposite ends of this particular spectrum.
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  #3995  
Old Posted Jun 3, 2023, 1:59 AM
Docere Docere is offline
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Originally Posted by Docere View Post
Black-White Index of Dissimilarity (Black % of MSA)

New York 73 (16.2%)
Los Angeles 59.7 (7.1%)
Chicago 71.5 (17.1%)
Dallas 51.6 (16.8%)
Houston 57.2 (18%)
Washington 58.4 (26%)
Philadelphia 63.3 (21.4%)
Atlanta 58.5 (35%)
Miami 62 (19.9%)
Phoenix 41.1 (6.7%)
Boston 57.4 (8.5%)
Riverside 41.8 (8.1%)
San Francisco 55.1 (8.1%)
Detroit 69.4 (23.2%)
Seattle 42.4 (7.8%)
Minneapolis 47.7 (10.6%)
Tampa 49.6 (12.7%)
San Diego 44.8 (5.6%)
Denver 54 (6.5%)
Baltimore 51 (30.1%)
St. Louis 67.4 (19.3%)

https://s4.ad.brown.edu/projects/div...aspx?msa=16740
Non-South, 15%+ Black

New York 73
Chicago 71.5
Detroit 69.4
St. Louis 67.4
Detroit 63.3

South, 15%+ Black

Miami 62
Atlanta 58.5
Washington 58.4
Houston 57.2
Dallas 51.6
Baltimore 51

Less than 15% Black

Los Angeles 59.7
Boston 57.4
San Francisco 55.1
Denver 54
Tampa 49.6
Minneapolis 47.4
San Diego 44.8
Seattle 42.4
Riverside 41.8
Phoenix 41.1
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  #3996  
Old Posted Jun 3, 2023, 4:24 PM
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Originally Posted by Crawford View Post
UK nonwhites tend to be South Asian. The U.S. dissimilarity index between whites and South Asians is minimal.
Index of Dissimilarity between Indian Americans and Whites (2010)

New York .513
Chicago .520
San Francisco .528
Dallas .541
San Jose .428
Washington .435
Los Angeles .412
Houston .518
Atlanta .504
Philadelphia 0.470
Seattle .503

https://s4.ad.brown.edu/projects/div...b/Default.aspx
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  #3997  
Old Posted Jun 3, 2023, 8:19 PM
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Originally Posted by Steely Dan View Post
Austin, Denver and Nashville absolutely.

But Portland's NHW growth last decade wasn't particularly strong, and Seattle surprisingly shrank on the measure.



1M+ US MSAs by NH-white population change 2010 -2020 (total MSA growth in parenthesis)

Riverside: -12.4 (+8.9)
San Jose: -11.2 (+8.9)
Hartford: -10.7 (+0.1)
Fresno: -10.7 (+8.4)
Memphis: -9.1 (+1.6)
Miami: -7.9 (+10.3)
Baltimore: -7.8 (+4.9)
Chicago: -7.3 (+1.7)
Los Angeles: -7.3 (+2.9)
San Francisco: -6.6 (+9.5)
Rochester: -6.4 (+1.0)
Milwaukee: -5.9 (+1.2)
Providence: -5.8 (+4.7)
Buffalo: -5.7 (+2.8)
Tulsa: -5.7 (+8.3)
New York: -5.6 (+6.6)
Cleveland: -5.5 (+0.5)
San Diego: -5.2 (+6.6)
St. Louis: -5.1 (+1.2)
Pittsburgh: -5.0 (+0.6)
Philadelphia: -4.8 (+4.7)
Las Vegas: -4.6 (+16.1)
Virginia Beach: -4.2 (+5.0)
Detroit: -4.0 (+2.2)
New Orleans: -3.8 (+6.9)
Boston: -3.4 (+8.5)
Honolulu: -3.4 (+6.6)
Sacramento: -3.4 (+11.6)
Washington: -2.2 (+13.0)
Louisville: -2.1 (+6.9)
Cincinnati: -1.9 (+5.6)
Birmingham: -1.5 (+5.1)
Tucson: -0.9 (+6.4)
Atlanta: -0.8 (+15.2)
Seattle: -0.5 (+16.8)

Oklahoma City: +0.1 (+13.8)
Tampa: +0.5 (+14.1)
Kansas City: +0.7 (+9.1)
Minneapolis: +0.8 (+10.7)
Indianapolis: +1.1 (+11.8)
Columbus: +1.4 (+12.5)
Portland: +1.7 (+12.9)
Dallas: +2.2 (+20.0)
Orlando: +2.2 (+25.3)
Houston: +2.5 (+20.3)
Grand Rapids: +3.0 (+9.5)
Richmond: +3.2 (+10.8)
Phoenix: +5.6 (+15.6)
Salt Lake City: +5.9 (+15.6)
Charlotte: +6.6 (+18.6)
Jacksonville: +7.7 (+19.3)
Denver: +8.4 (+16.5)
San Antonio: +8.4 (+19.4)
Nashville: +11.6 (+20.9)
Raleigh: +14.9 (+25.1)
Austin: +20.7 (+33.0)

source: https://www.brookings.edu/wp-content..._-Populati.pdf


For an interesting intra-state take on this movement, just look at Nashville and Memphis on complete opposite ends of this particular spectrum.
I hadn’t realized that both Portland and Seattle had stable/shrinking NHW populations. On the other end of the spectrum, I hadn’t realized that San Antonio’s NHW was growing so rapidly.
__________________
HTOWN: 2305k (+10%) + MSA suburbs: 4818k (+26%) + CSA exurbs: 190k (+6%)
BIGD: 1304k (+9%) + MSA div. suburbs: 3826k (+26%) + adj. CSA exurbs: 394k (+8%)
FTW: 919k (+24%) + MSA div. suburbs: 1589k (+14%) + adj. CSA exurbs: 90k (+12%)
SATX: 1435k (+8%) + MSA suburbs: 1124k (+38%) + CSA exurbs: 18k (+11%)
ATX: 962k (+22%) + MSA suburbs: 1322k (+43%)

Last edited by wwmiv; Jun 3, 2023 at 11:06 PM.
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  #3998  
Old Posted Jun 3, 2023, 11:02 PM
dave8721 dave8721 is offline
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Originally Posted by Steely Dan View Post
Austin, Denver and Nashville absolutely.

But Portland's NHW growth last decade wasn't particularly strong, and Seattle surprisingly shrank on the measure.



1M+ US MSAs by NH-white population change 2010 -2020 (total MSA growth in parenthesis)

Riverside: -12.4 (+8.9)
San Jose: -11.2 (+8.9)
Hartford: -10.7 (+0.1)
Fresno: -10.7 (+8.4)
Memphis: -9.1 (+1.6)
Miami: -7.9 (+10.3)
Baltimore: -7.8 (+4.9)
Chicago: -7.3 (+1.7)
Los Angeles: -7.3 (+2.9)
San Francisco: -6.6 (+9.5)
Rochester: -6.4 (+1.0)
Milwaukee: -5.9 (+1.2)
Providence: -5.8 (+4.7)
Buffalo: -5.7 (+2.8)
Tulsa: -5.7 (+8.3)
New York: -5.6 (+6.6)
Cleveland: -5.5 (+0.5)
San Diego: -5.2 (+6.6)
St. Louis: -5.1 (+1.2)
Pittsburgh: -5.0 (+0.6)
Philadelphia: -4.8 (+4.7)
Las Vegas: -4.6 (+16.1)
Virginia Beach: -4.2 (+5.0)
Detroit: -4.0 (+2.2)
New Orleans: -3.8 (+6.9)
Boston: -3.4 (+8.5)
Honolulu: -3.4 (+6.6)
Sacramento: -3.4 (+11.6)
Washington: -2.2 (+13.0)
Louisville: -2.1 (+6.9)
Cincinnati: -1.9 (+5.6)
Birmingham: -1.5 (+5.1)
Tucson: -0.9 (+6.4)
Atlanta: -0.8 (+15.2)
Seattle: -0.5 (+16.8)

Oklahoma City: +0.1 (+13.8)
Tampa: +0.5 (+14.1)
Kansas City: +0.7 (+9.1)
Minneapolis: +0.8 (+10.7)
Indianapolis: +1.1 (+11.8)
Columbus: +1.4 (+12.5)
Portland: +1.7 (+12.9)
Dallas: +2.2 (+20.0)
Orlando: +2.2 (+25.3)
Houston: +2.5 (+20.3)
Grand Rapids: +3.0 (+9.5)
Richmond: +3.2 (+10.8)
Phoenix: +5.6 (+15.6)
Salt Lake City: +5.9 (+15.6)
Charlotte: +6.6 (+18.6)
Jacksonville: +7.7 (+19.3)
Denver: +8.4 (+16.5)
San Antonio: +8.4 (+19.4)
Nashville: +11.6 (+20.9)
Raleigh: +14.9 (+25.1)
Austin: +20.7 (+33.0)

source: https://www.brookings.edu/wp-content..._-Populati.pdf


For an interesting intra-state take on this movement, just look at Nashville and Memphis on complete opposite ends of this particular spectrum.
Another interesting take is that the numbers would probably add up to a big negative % overall which means either the white NH population in general is shrinking or that they are generally moving from cities to smaller metros/small towns rather than to other large metros. Or probably both.
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  #3999  
Old Posted Jun 4, 2023, 1:59 PM
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. On the other end of the spectrum, I hadn’t realized that San Antonio’s NHW was growing so rapidly.
Yeah, when looking at the 9 metros who saw NHW growth >5% last decade, San Antonio was the most surprising to me as well.

I always think of it as being such a heavily Latino metro area, which it is, but I hadn't appreciated the fact that it has also now become one of the "cities that white people like".
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  #4000  
Old Posted Jun 4, 2023, 2:27 PM
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It might just be that SA is popular with whites who may not generate Portlandia-style hype. I'm pretty sure it's popular with conservative older whites, military-affiliated whites and the like. It's a really cheap metro, where you get a lot of sprawl for your money. They probably aren't producing TikTok videos on their love of Buc-ees, or whatever. No hacker houses jumping on the AI boom, or influencers with their content.
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