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Christopher suggested that a high level of racial residential segregation reflects the small size of the colonizer group and their cultural preference. Lewis and Harris (2013) researched the history of segregation in Bombay and found a high level of residential segregation between European and local residents in the colonial period before the 1950s. During the Japanese colonial rule of Taiwan, the area of Seimon-cho (modern name Ximending) was developed for new Japanese immigrants. This extensive body of scholarship makes it clear that residential segregation has persisted for centuries, mainly because colonizers prefer staying among themselves for reasons of safety and cultural identity. Residential segregation also reflects own-group preference, prejudice against other groups, and affinity for familiar culture and social practices.

      In the past century, the study of racial and ethnic segregation became more important than ever as many countries (e.g. Australia, Canada, the United States) became more racially and ethnically diverse due to the arrival of immigrants from all over the world. As the level of racial and ethnic diversity increases, the level of residential segregation for some groups has remained steady or even increased. Given the broad and negative impact of segregation on the social and economic outcomes of segregated groups, it is important to have a better understanding of the reasons for its emergence in a multi-ethnic context, the mechanisms for maintaining it, and its wide-ranging consequences.

      This book is an in-depth examination of segregation, with topics ranging from its societal importance, theoretical foundations, conceptual framing, methodological approaches, consequences, and potential remedies at both the community and macro level.

      Chapter 3 turns to how social scientists measure segregation. Identifying patterns allows us to describe what segregation looks like in different places, and helps us to quantify the extent of segregation using indices and other summary measures. Quantitative measures of segregation show that it is common, with almost everyone experiencing some form of it in their lifetime. Representing the “bird’s-eye” view, we first discuss segregation indices that seek to summarize important features of city-wide segregation patterns. Quantitative indices developed by sociologists and geographers can describe the evenness, exposure, concentration, centralization, and clustering of different groups within the city (Massey and Denton 1988). We will review methodological innovations seeking to improve the accuracy of these measures, as well as new measures that better incorporate spatial relations between groups, account for segregation in multigroup settings, and allow for comparison of different countries and urban scale. The ubiquitous nature of segregation suggests that it is a good entry point to understand group dynamics and individual behaviors. However, studying these important processes requires zooming in from the bird’s-eye perspective toward the ground level. Representing a “on-foot” or “street-level” view, we will discuss how segregation can be created and maintained through a broader range of physical, social, and symbolic boundaries that often create social distance even when groups are physically proximate. Together, both bird’s-eye and ground-level assessments of segregation are important for explaining the social, economic, and cultural factors that create and maintain that segregation over time.

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