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Project Muse 4

Crowded out? The racial composition of American occupations

Publication ,  Chapter
Hamilton, D; Darity, WA
2012

Over 35 years ago, Barbara Bergmann (1971) hypothesized that labor market discrimination against black males is manifest in a "crowding" effect, which results in lower earnings. White employers' refusal to hire blacks in certain occupations forces them to cluster and creates crowding in less desirable jobs, reinforcing a condition of lower earnings. Bergmann provided empirical evidence of this crowding phenomenon by reporting the disproportionate presence of black male workers in several low-skilled occupations relative to what would be expected based on educational attainment and population share. In this chapter we provide an update and extension of black male occupational crowding using a more extensive list of occupations that is not limited to low-skilled work based on the 2000 decennial census. Data are examined to determine whether the crowding phenomenon is still evident in the post-Civil Rights labor market. In addition, a correlation analysis is performed to test for a relationship between occupational crowding and earnings.

Duke Scholars

Publication Date

2012

Volume

9780472026180

Start / End Page

60 / 78

Publisher

DUMMY PUBID
 

Citation

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Hamilton, D., & Darity, W. A. (2012). Crowded out? The racial composition of American occupations. In Project Muse 4 (Vol. 9780472026180, pp. 60–78). DUMMY PUBID.
Hamilton, D., and W. A. Darity. “Crowded out? The racial composition of American occupations.” In Project Muse 4, 9780472026180:60–78. DUMMY PUBID, 2012.
Hamilton D, Darity WA. Crowded out? The racial composition of American occupations. In: Project Muse 4. DUMMY PUBID; 2012. p. 60–78.
Hamilton, D., and W. A. Darity. “Crowded out? The racial composition of American occupations.” Project Muse 4, vol. 9780472026180, DUMMY PUBID, 2012, pp. 60–78.
Hamilton D, Darity WA. Crowded out? The racial composition of American occupations. Project Muse 4. DUMMY PUBID; 2012. p. 60–78.

Publication Date

2012

Volume

9780472026180

Start / End Page

60 / 78

Publisher

DUMMY PUBID