Change font size
MultimediaBlog
Share
Print

Press Release

Joint Center Releases Reports on How Poverty Concentration and Racial Segregation Exacerbate Health Inequities
September 7, 2011

After a decade-long rise in concentrated poverty, one in 11 residents of metropolitan areas now live in communities where at least 30 percent of their neighbors are poor, according to a pair of studies unveiled today by the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies.

The reports, A Lost Decade: Neighborhood Poverty and the Urban Crisis of the 2000s, produced in collaboration with the Poverty & Race Research Action Council, and Segregated Spaces, Risky Places: The Effects of Racial Segregation on Health Inequalities, underscore the links between poverty and racial segregation in metropolitan neighborhoods and the health of the people who live in them.

They were released as the Joint Center convened a PLACEMATTERS National Conference that is focusing on the relationship between place and health, especially as it pertains to racial and ethnic health inequality.

 

Read more by downloading the full press release below.

Related Topics

  • Health Disparities
  • Health Issues & Factors
  • Place Matters

Media Contact

(202) 789-3500

Focus Magazine

 

Since 1972, FOCUS magazine has provided coverage of national issues to a leadership audience of over 18,0000 readers.

Read More »

Upcoming Events

January 31, 2013 - 9:30am
National Press Club