Event Summary
In his 1997 book Poverty and Place, Paul Jargowsky reported a doubling in the 1970s and 1980s of the number of people living in neighborhoods of concentrated povertywhere the poverty rate was 40 percent or more. Now, evidence drawn from Census 2000 indicates the trend reversed itself in the 1990s.
To probe this striking reversal, the Center on Urban and Metropolitan Policy and Living Cities will co-sponsor an in-depth public forum on May 19 at which Jargowsky and Urban Institute researcher Tom Kingsley will review new research on recent trends. Each scholar will present findings from new reports they have prepared, and panelists will comment on the implications of these findings for policies to assist poor families and poor neighborhoods.
Printable Event Flyer (PDF)