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Nevilledog

(55,078 posts)
Thu Jul 27, 2023, 03:25 PM Jul 2023

In America's "internal colonies," the poor die far younger than richer Americans

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/injustice-of-place-internal-colonies-poverty-appalachia-cotton-belt-texas/

Millions of Americans are living in communities mired in "deep disadvantage," mostly rural locations stuck in generational poverty, but where some residents experience health outcomes that shorten average life expectancies to that of poor nations.

These are America's "internal colonies," according to a new book, "The Injustice of Place" (Mariner Books, August 2023), about the geography of poverty. Researchers and co-authors Kathryn J. Edin, a sociology professor at Princeton University; H. Luke Shaefer, a professor of social justice and social policy at the University of Michigan; and Timothy Nelson, director of undergraduate studies in sociology and a lecturer of public affairs at Princeton, have taken a deep dive into community-level data to create the "Index of Deep Disadvantage," which combines poverty statistics with health measures, such as life expectancy, to examine trends across the nation.

The resulting map shows huge swaths of deeply disadvantaged locations across the nation's 3,000 counties, places that are mostly located outside of the largest U.S. cities yet which share some traits: A history of resource extraction, unequal educational opportunities, a breakdown of social bonds, violence and local corruption. These locations also were linked to some of the most brutal aspects of U.S. history, from slavery to Appalachia's coal mining practices, the authors note.

The authors and their researchers visited poor locations and talked with residents, and they came away with an observation: These regions effectively operate as "internal colonies" within the U.S., where residents lack access to the same opportunities as other Americans.

*snip*


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In America's "internal colonies," the poor die far younger than richer Americans (Original Post) Nevilledog Jul 2023 OP
And they vote republican Mysterian Jul 2023 #1
Not all of them. Elessar Zappa Jul 2023 #2
Oh, thank god, I thought I was going to have to give a shit about them. WhiskeyGrinder Jul 2023 #4
K&R WhiskeyGrinder Jul 2023 #3
I'd wager some Republicans vote with the thought of keeping these internal colonies intact Auggie Jul 2023 #5
K&R Solly Mack Jul 2023 #6
"they are the most unequal places in our nation" - well, no, not the most muriel_volestrangler Jul 2023 #7

Elessar Zappa

(16,385 posts)
2. Not all of them.
Thu Jul 27, 2023, 03:35 PM
Jul 2023

The cotton belt of Mississippi and Alabama is mostly black people who vote for Democrats.

Auggie

(33,147 posts)
5. I'd wager some Republicans vote with the thought of keeping these internal colonies intact
Thu Jul 27, 2023, 03:57 PM
Jul 2023

muriel_volestrangler

(106,197 posts)
7. "they are the most unequal places in our nation" - well, no, not the most
Thu Jul 27, 2023, 06:57 PM
Jul 2023

"The "internal colonies" analyzed by Edin and her co-authors — Appalachia, the Tobacco Belt of Virginia and the Carolinas, the Cotton Belt in the South and South Texas"

US states (and similar) by decreasing Gini coeffiencient, in 2019 (ie decreasing inequality)

United States overall 0.4811
1 Puerto Rico 0.5509
2 New York 0.5149
3 District of Columbia 0.5115
4 Connecticut 0.5024
5 Louisiana 0.4978
6 Mississippi 0.4896
7 California 0.4866
8 Florida 0.4808
9 Massachusetts 0.4803
10 Illinois 0.4800
11 Georgia 0.4795
...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_U.S._states_and_territories_by_income_inequality

There's still a lot of inequality in big cities (all over the world, for that matter).

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