Publications
Issue Brief: The Changing Face of Homeowners in Large Metro Areas
Issue Brief: The Changing Face of Households with Children in Large Metropolitan Areas
Issue Brief: Segregation Falls for Black Children in Most Metro Areas But
Remains High; Fewer Metros Experience Declines for Latinos
Special Report: Segregation and Exposure to
High-Poverty Schools in Large Metropolitan Areas: 2008--09
Issue Brief: Prospects for Equity
in Boston Public Schools’ School Assignment Plans
Spotlight Resource: Children Left Behind: How Metropolitan Areas are Failing America's
Children Read the Report
(PDF) • Read the Chartbook
(PDF)
Data Briefs: Disparities in Neighborhood Poverty of Poor Black
and White Children.
Related Resources
U.S. Census Bureau: Leading collector and disseminator
of information for the United States, covering a wide range of subjects including
population, households, businesses, housing, income and poverty, health insurance
and more. To focus on a particular geographic area, see especially
American Factfinder.
Fedstats: The gateway to statistics from
over 100 U.S. Federal agencies.
National Neighborhood Indicators Partnership
The National Neighborhood Indicators Partnership (NNIP) is a collaborative effort
by the Urban Institute and local partners to further the development and use of
neighborhood-level information systems in local policymaking and community building.
PolicyMap: Interactive website produced
by the Reinvestment Fund, providing extensive housing and demographic data at the
community, regional, and national level. Provides mapping and other tools to assist
you in analyzing, interpreting, and applying the data. While some data is available
by paid subscription, free datasets include Census, Postal Service, city crime rates
from the FBI, Home Mortgage Disclosure Act, County Business Patterns, HUD, HHS and
more.
Lewis Mumford Center for Comparative Urban
and Regional Research, at the University at Albany: Extensive data, at the
metropolitan, city and suburban level, and studies that provide information and
analyses of how the racial and ethnic composition of metropolitan areas has shifted
over the past two decades, and how increasing diversity is experienced at the level
of local neighborhoods.
Kirwan Institute for the Study of Race and Ethnicity,
at The Ohio State University provides research on issues related to structural racism,
racial hierarchy, and inequality. Core subject areas include Opportunity Communities/Housing,
Education, the African-American Male Initiative, Structural Racism, and an International
Program. Kirwan has also pioneered an intensive opportunity mapping/GIS program.
National Center for Health Statistics: The
Nation’s principal health statistics agency, providing information on topics such
as on births, deaths, life expectancy, mental health, child health, behaviors as
they relate to health, information about the health care system, historic trends,
and health disparities.
National Center for Education Statistics: The
primary federal entity for collecting and analyzing data related to education, including
information on school enrollment, student and teacher characteristics, achievement
levels and trends, school spending, and many specialized studies. Allows for comparisons
between school districts and, in some instances, individual schools.
National Low-Income Housing Coalition’s
“Out of Reach” Data: Provides current data on affordability of rental housing
units at the state and metro area levels.
Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA)
data: Collected and prepared by the Federal Financial Institutions Examination
Council, HMDA provides extensive information on lending for home mortgages, including
such items as name and type of lenders, mortgage amount, applicant characteristics
such as race and income level, origination and denial rates, reason for denial,
characteristics of the neighborhood in which mortgage would be used, and, in some
cases, mortgage interest rate.