Stereotypes, Norms and Interracial Behavior in Sao Paulo, Brazil
1957; SAGE Publishing; Volume: 22; Issue: 6 Linguagem: Inglês
10.2307/2089199
ISSN1939-8271
AutoresRoger Bastide, Pierre van den Berghe,
Tópico(s)Migration, Racism, and Human Rights
Resumoreflects residential concentration of Negroes. 20 In such a circumstance or in a county with only one Negro per thousand whites, an integration plan may not be required. The failure of Missouri, then, to meet expectations regarding the Negro ratio factor may thus be in part an artifact. In any case, generalizations from the thinly Negro-settled border-state to the thickly Negro-settled southern states concerning the racial variable seem extremely hazardous. In Kentucky, where the racial ratio hypothesis was supported, economic prosperity and Negro ratio acted together to successfully separate many of the segregated from the desegregated counties (see Table 5). This suggests the interesting possiblity that the Negro ratio factor may interact with economic variables in the deep South's future educational integration process; low Negro ratio, prosperous rural communities desegregating first and high Negro ratio, poor rural communities desegregating last.
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