Andrew and DeniseFeil

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With World War II came new changes, particularly the acceleration of suburbanization and white flight in the face of continued black migration to northern cities. While in 1940 only one-third of metropolitan residents lived in suburbs, by 1965, the majority did. The end result, according to Massey and Denton, was that nearly all American cities with significant black populations—North, South, and West—had developed black ghettos.77
Divided by Faith: Evangelical Religion and the Problem of Race in America
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