To: CTPP-News
This is an *excellent* web site on census data, with focus on Los Angeles County, by Prof.
Dowell Myers and his colleagues at the University of Southern California. The animated
maps are fascinating. Great stuff!
Chuck Purvis, MTC
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Date: Sat, 31 Mar 2001
10:31:17 -0800
To: URBGEOG(a)LISTSERV.ARIZONA.EDU
From: Dowell Myers <dowell(a)rcf-fs.usc.edu>
Subject: New Website on 2000 Race in California and the US
Cc: jychung(a)usc.edu
Dear Colleagues,
With release of data on race and Hispanic origin from the 2000 census, we
have set up a new website at USC that provides a full comparison of the 50
states, including details on California and Los Angeles. This site reports
findings from a project on the changing contours of race and Hispanic
origin, Race Contours 2000. (Co-investigators are Dowell Myers, Philip
Ethington, Angela James, and William Frey.)
The site address is:
http://www.usc.edu/sppd/census2000
Contents focus on findings from the new multiracial question in the
census, and highlight spatial differences in racial patterns. Graphs compare all 50
states (especially Mississippi and California!).
In California, we have identified a "multiracial belt" in the center of
the state. (It is not in San Francisco.)
Also on the site is an evaluation of where total population growth in
California counties, or growth of specific racial groups, exceeded what
was previously forecast.
Within Los Angeles County, we have posted a unique set of *animated maps* that traces the
spread of racial diversity from 1940 to 2000. We call
these maps, displays of growing "racial majorities." The site also
includes measures of exposure and dissimilarity from 1940 to 2000 for four main
race-ethnic groups.
Soon to be added is a summary of changes in composition and growing
diversity for specific communities in the Los Angeles area.
Of general interest to all: the site includes a resource of some
importance. "Overlap" is the title of our multi-section user guide to race
and Hispanic origin in Census 2000. The major changes in the 2000 census
necessitate much more careful consideration by all census data users.
We welcome your visit!
http://www.usc.edu/sppd/census2000
Dowell Myers
Project PI
--
--
Dowell Myers
Director, Master of Planning Program
School of Policy, Planning & Development
301 Lewis Hall Phone: (213) 740-7095
University of Southern California FAX: (213) 821-1466
Los Angeles, CA 90089-0626 Internet: dowell(a)rcf.usc.edu
http://www-rcf.usc.edu/~dowell/
http://www.usc.edu/schools/sppd/futures/
http://www.usc.edu/schools/sppd/admissions/excellence/