HIGHLIGHTS
SUMMARY
Black and white households reside in substantially different neighborhoods in the U.S., and the odds of being born into high-poverty neighborhoods is much higher for Black children relative to white children. Motivated by findings of differential class permeability by race in exposure to disadvantage, this study goes further by testing for heterogeneity by race in the neighborhood residential trajectories of individuals over time. Building on a body of research on the processes of neighborhood attainment and residential mobility, the authors view cumulative neighborhood exposure as a sequence over the life course and . . .
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