| Publications [#289104] of William A. Darity
search .Chapters in Books
- Hamilton, D; Darity, WA, Crowded out? The racial composition of American occupations,
in Project Muse 4, edited by James S. Jackson and Sherrill L. Sellers, vol. 9780472026180
(2012),
pp. 60-78, DUMMY PUBID, Ann Arbor, ISBN 9780472117505
(last updated on 2024/04/19)
Abstract: 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.
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