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Book
School Desegregation and Educational Attainment for Blacks
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Year: 2007 Publisher: Cambridge, Mass. National Bureau of Economic Research

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From Separate and Unequal to Integrated and Equal? School Desegregation and School Finance in Louisiana
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Year: 2007 Publisher: Cambridge, Mass. National Bureau of Economic Research

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The Effects of School Desegregation on Mixed-Race Births
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Year: 2016 Publisher: Cambridge, Mass. National Bureau of Economic Research

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We find a strong positive correlation between black exposure to whites in their school district and the prevalence of later mixed-race (black-white) births, consistent with the literature on residential segregation and endogamy. However, that relationship is significantly attenuated by the addition of a few control variables, suggesting that individuals with higher propensities to have mixed-race births are more likely to live in desegregated school districts. We exploit quasi-random variation to estimate causal effects of school desegregation on mixed-race childbearing, finding small to moderate statistically insignificant effects. Because the upward trend across cohorts in mixed-race childbearing was substantial, separating the effects of desegregation plans from secular cohort trends is difficult; results are sensitive to how we specify the cohort trends and to the inclusion of Chicago/Cook County in the sample. Taken together, the analyses suggest that while lower levels of school segregation are associated with higher rates of mixed-race childbearing, a substantial portion of that relationship is likely due to who chooses to live in places with desegregated schools. This suggests that researchers should be cautious about interpreting the relationship between segregation--whether residential or school--and other outcomes as causal.


Digital
From separate and unequal to integrated and equal? School desegregation and school finance in Louisiana
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Year: 2007 Publisher: Cambridge, Mass. NBER

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School desegregation and educational attainment for blacks
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Year: 2007 Publisher: Cambridge, Mass. NBER

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Paying for health insurance: the tradeoff between competition and adverse selection
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Year: 1996 Publisher: Cambridge, Mass. National Bureau of Economic Research

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Paying for health insurance : the tradeoff between competition and adverse selection.
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Year: 1996 Publisher: Cambridge National Bureau Of Economic Research. Working Paper Nr. 5796

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Paying for Progress: Conditional Grants and the Desegregation of Southern Schools
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Year: 2009 Publisher: Cambridge, Mass National Bureau of Economic Research

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This paper examines how a large conditional grants program influenced school desegregation in the American South. Exploiting newly collected archival data and quasi-experimental variation in potential per-pupil federal grants, we show that school districts with more at risk in 1966 were more likely to desegregate just enough to receive their funds. Although the program did not raise the exposure of blacks to whites like later court orders, districts with larger grants at risk in 1966 were less likely to be under court order through 1970, suggesting that tying federal funds to nondiscrimination reduced the burden of desegregation on federal courts.


Digital
Federal Aid and Equality of Educational Opportunity : Evidence from the Introduction of Title I in the South
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Year: 2011 Publisher: Cambridge, Mass. National Bureau of Economic Research

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Title I of the 1965 Elementary and Secondary Education Act substantially increased federal aid for education, with the goal of expanding educational opportunity. Combining the timing of the program's introduction with variation in its intensity, we find that Title I increased school spending by 46 cents on the dollar in the average school district in the South and increased spending nearly dollar-for-dollar in Southern districts with little scope for local offset. Based on this differential fiscal response, we find that increases in school budgets from Title I decreased high school dropout rates for whites, but not blacks.


Book
From Separate and Unequal to Integrated and Equal? School Desegregation and School Finance in Louisiana
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Year: 2007 Publisher: Cambridge, Mass. National Bureau of Economic Research

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An important goal of the desegregation of schools following the Supreme Court's decision in Brown vs. Board of Education was to improve the quality of the schools black children attended. This paper uses a new dataset to examine the effects of desegregation on public and private enrollment and the system of school finance for Louisiana. I show that the system of school finance in Louisiana had long favored whites in high black enrollment share districts. Because of this system, whites in districts with high black enrollment shares stood to lose the most from desegregation, as the gap between white student-teacher ratios and black student-teacher ratios in those districts was higher. Given the importance of districts' black enrollment share in the system of finance and the potential impact of desegregation, I examine how changes in public and private enrollment, the local property tax base, and per-pupil revenue relate to the initial black enrollment share. The analysis suggests that the Jim-Crow system of school finance -- which had prevailed for over 60 years -- unraveled as the schools desegregated. While desegregation did induce some "white flight" and reduce the local property tax base slightly, the policies had the intended effect of reducing black-white gaps in school resources, as increased funding allowed districts to "level up" average spending in integrated schools to that previously experienced only in the white schools.

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