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Metropolitan Areas
Poor individuals and families are not evenly distributed across communities or throughout the country. Instead, they tend to live near one another, clustering in certain neighborhoods and regions. This concentration of poverty results in higher crime rates, underperforming public schools, poor housing and health conditions, as well as limited access to private services and job opportunities.
November 3, 2011, Elizabeth Kneebone, Carey Nadeau and Alan Berube
October 19, 2010, Alan Berube
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Refine by: U.S. Poverty | Inequality | U.S. Metro Areas | Working Poor
Paper
March 30, 2010, Emily Garr and Elizabeth Kneebone
Paper | The Future of Children
Spring 2009, Ron Haskins and James Kemple
Report
October 24, 2008, Alan Berube and Elizabeth Kneebone
August 8, 2008, Alan Berube and Elizabeth Kneebone
March 2007, Brooke DeRenzis and Martha Ross
October 2005, Alan Berube and Bruce Katz
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Suburbia is home to the largest and fastest growing poor population in the country and more than half of the metropolitan poor.
In their new book, Elizabeth Kneebone and Alan Berube offer anti-poverty strategies that work region-wide.
Visit the book's site for action tools and more information »
Alan Berube
Senior Fellow and Deputy Director, Metropolitan Policy Program
@berubea1
Elizabeth Kneebone
Fellow, Metropolitan Policy Program
@ekneebone