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  1. "American ghetto" usually denotes an urban neighborhood with crime, gang violence, and extreme poverty, with a significant number of minority citizens living in it. Their origins are manifold. Historically, violence has been used to intimidate certain demographics into remaining in ghettos. [4]

  2. 24 de sept. de 2019 · The linkage between Jews and “ghetto” began in the early 16th century. Here's how the word came to signify racial segregation in America.

  3. Tras una recuperación perversa del concepto medieval por parte de los nazis, la idea de gueto se empezó a generalizar de forma casi simultánea entre los científicos sociales afroamericanos de Estados Unidos en los años cuarenta del siglo pasado.

  4. 31 de mar. de 2017 · Only after the Second World War did “ghetto” come to mean segregated African-American communities. The civil rights activists who imported the term believed urban African Americans suffered from a systemic racism similar in kind if not in degree to that faced by Jews under fascism.

  5. This paper examines segregation in American cities from 1890 to 1990. From 1890 to 1940, ghettos were born as blacks migrated to urban areas and cities developed vast expanses filled with almost entirely black housing.

  6. This paper studies segregation in American cities from 1890 to 1990 and how it changed over time. It finds that legal barriers, decentralized racism, and urban population or density are the main factors affecting segregation.

  7. 3 de may. de 2017 · In 1933, faced with a housing shortage, the federal government began a program explicitly designed to increase — and segregate — America's housing stock. Author Richard Rothstein says the ...