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Paper: Understanding Newark’s conflict and violence within the scope of urban space and segregation.
Nieves L. Garcia Pimienta
Introduction
Violence in Newark has been a recurrent problem to the point of making violence a fixture in certain areas of
this urban city. Undoubtedly, Newark today is perceived as a violent and a not-safe-city by many residents and
outsiders. This perception has been fed by historical facts such as the 1967’s riots (Herman, 2014). However, as
noted by others, the riots were an example of the culmination or one of the effects of subtleties –and not so
subtle- sociological dynamics that have been happening since late 19th
century and early 1900’s. In this paper, I
review historical background and its lingering effects in Newark. I also apply Massey’s Twin Processes theory,
as a possible explanation to the lack of upward mobility on certain communities.
Background
Mayor events in Newark have lured the attention, visit, and settlement of newcomers as well as domestic and
international investments. By being the space of mayor historical turning points, it also provided the space for
power-craving leaders, good and corrupted politicians, money-making investors and mafia-control-seekers. All
these players and forces, as Peter Coleman explains, had and have a messy effect in the intractable conflict in
Newark. These forces (and their actions) are attractors that intensify the magnitude and depth of the conflict.
The Port of Newark opened around 1915 and it led the nation's shipbuilders during WWI. These years were
significant because they brought the first large group of Southern blacks to northern U.S. As many in-migration,
in search of jobs and defense-related jobs. Agricultural employment opportunities started to decline. By the
1930s, Newark was a major East Coast transportation hub with substantial retail, and manufacturing businesses.
Newark’s Golden Era started to decline soon after the beginning the Great Depression. Employment dropped in
Newark by 25% between January and November of 1930 (Tuttle, 2009). A corrupt local government
undermined city services, commutable highways facilitated rich and middle class city residents to move to the
suburbs, and the tax base eroded as some important industries relocated. Economic disadvantage groups had
little to no option to relocate. Disadvantage communities, the poor and poor African Americans, had little to no
change in relocating.
Critical moments of historical weight in this analysis are; the Golden Era, it places Newark on the map. After
reaching a peak of 442,337 residents counted in the 1930 Census, the city's population saw a decline of nearly
40% as residents moved to surrounding suburbs. Prohibition, it provoked corruption and the growth of
organized crime. The Great Depression signaled the beginning of the urban decline and provoked the exodus of
the upper class and the working class. There is a shift; Newark’s inhabitants changed from the working class to
the poorest class. The Industrial Revolution, World War I, and World War II, generated influxes of investments,
job opportunities and increased immigration. It also kept organized crime and corruption at the heart of
Newark’s government and business dynamics (Tuttle, 2009). The 1967 riots caused the exodus of whites and
the new middle class from Newark and stigmatized Newark for the long run.
Newark, seen as a violent city, is also a fact-driven statement. Newark’s crime rate, violence trajectory (Exhibit
1) and its history has hindered several attempts to revamp Newark’s safety and image. As mentioned, Newark’s
riots of 1967 pitted residents of the city’s predominantly black neighborhoods against mostly white police and
military forces. Furthermore, according to Data.com, a private social networking and information website,
Newark has had a constant above-average crime and violent crime rate when compared with other urban areas
in the U.S. To address all reasons of Newark’s persistent violence would be comprehensive, aspect-wide
debatable and of readable length. Throughout its history, there have been several attempts to revitalize Newark.
However, however, I will focus my narrative in the ingrained subtleties that I suggest, have perpetuated conflict
in Newark. As Peter Coleman suggests in Five Percent, to address conflict through a simple story is dangerous;
conflict, as he states, involves a complex story.
As an initial framework, and a broad representation of Newark’s dynamics, I have included a timeline map of
Newark’s main events within the scope of urban space and economy (Exhibit 2; Map Timeline). It is based on
Coleman’s mapping approach. According to Coleman, there are powerful forces at work in these types of
situations shaping what people see, feel, think, and do. In other words; intractability happens when the many
different components of a conflict collapse together into one mass, into one very simple ‘us versus them’ story
that effectively resists change.
The timeline map identifies broad connections (urban space and
economy; attractors and inhibitors) that have contributed, in my
opinion, in a very fundamental way to Newark’s complex dynamics
resulting in an increase or decrease in violence. There are several
loops within this framework (Exhibit 3); however I suggest placing
attention to the loop involving segregation and ghettos.
I will further analyze one of the loops specifically involving the
element of segregation, exodus of inhabitants, ghettos, housing and
its characteristics. I will deconstruct this relationship in more detail
to provide a deeper understanding of Newark’s attractors/inhibitors of conflict, aiming for a potential treatment
of the problem. I will discuss this loop to further understand the psychological, social, and community-based
aspects of conflict escalation and intractability. This paper argues the importance, long term effects and
implications that segregation –racial, social, financial, and physical- and immigration and its specific dynamics
as long standing attractors of Newark’s history of urban conflict and violence.
Segregation
The ghetto phenomena had been present since Newark’s beginnings (i.e. Jewish, Italian, German, and African
Americans enclaves). However, African American ghettos were solidified by segregation customs. Mandated or
de facto, segregation justified the increased physical separation and isolation of the African Americans in
Newark, making this group the poorest and most disadvantage group in Newark. The burgeoning prosperity of
the 1950s masked deep racial divisions and inequalities that simmered, waiting for the tipping point. These
circumstances bring tension, hence conflict.
Again, in the 1950s, the migration to the suburbs appeared mainly to involve white Newark residents leaving
the bustle and the increasing crime of the inner city. Middle class African Americans followed, leaving African
Americans working in in low-paying factory jobs as the main inhabitant of Newark. By 1966, African
Americans were the majority of population, but government offices and the police department were dominated
by whites. There was economic and political imbalance. These circumstances (lack of representation) also
brought tension, hence it contributes to conflict.
Newark is not an isolated case of economic growth followed by large influxes of immigration. Throughout US
history, racial and ethnic groups arriving into areas of economic growth have settled in urban areas or places
close to urban areas. These areas are usually containers of old housing, poor services, and low or decreasing
socioeconomic status. This was experienced by the Irish, Germans, Jews, and Italians arriving into Newark in
the early 1900’s. Newark, because of its location -entry port of businesses- offered business opportunity as well
as employment to many immigrants. Upon arrival, immigrants settled in ghettos creating cultural and socio-
economic enclaves. With time, many immigrants moved outside their enclaves into more assimilated
progressive areas. However, many Blacks remained isolated and segregated. One has to deconstruct this
different outcome in this specific group.
Segregation and its effects
De jure segregation, enforced by law, was stopped in the United States by federal enforcement of a series of
Supreme Court decisions after Brown v. Board of Education in 1954. Its elimination lasted through much of the
1950s, and 1960s. I argue that these laws have a lasting effect in attitudes even when these laws are lifted. As
supporting evidence, it has been noticed that the Fair Housing Act of 1968 theoretically put an end to
discrimination; however, residential segregation proved to be remarkably persistent (Massey and Denton,
1993:186-216). Attitudes toward segregation and discrimination have been present; antagonism, frustration and
conflict follow as a natural way to response to unfairness.
In a very real way, barriers to spatial mobility become barriers to social mobility; social mobility barriers
eliminate opportunities to the isolated. Lack upward social mobility prevents the economic growth of the group.
Therefore segregation could and has perpetuated poverty. The poor becomes vulnerable to corruption, crime,
and illicit activities as a way of life to survive, as strongly illustrated by Bourgeois through In Search of
Respect’s narratives. Therefore, we can suggest that segregation is directly related to crime and violence in
more than one way. First, crime becomes an alternative to economic survival; second, when a group is isolated
and unexposed to other processes of socialization, their attitudes are strengthen since they copy perceived
realities, attitudes, interpretations, and ways of resolving situations (i.e. illicit dealings, crime) from their
surroundings (enclaves and ghettos). Their attitudes tend to be reinforced by peers, older generations, and due to
the isolation that segregation brings. Through isolation, poverty, and crime are perpetuated; crime leads to
conflict.
As illustrated by Massey, when large Black communities are subject to high levels of segregation, intense racial
isolation is inevitable. He further illustrates how 20 years after the Fair Housing Act, Blacks were still unlikely
to come into residential contact with members of other groups. He concludes that the large ghettos of the North
have remained substantially intact and were largely unaffected by Civil Rights legislation of the 1960s. He
concludes that Black communities are still isolated and remain a very residentially segregated group (Massey,
2001).
Massey compared Europeans and Blacks immigrants’ experiences and offered an explanation for its differences.
His claim offers a noble way of understanding the different paths amongst the different immigrant groups; this
theory is called the twin processes. This theory suggests that quantity (how many immigrants), period of time
of the influx (rapid/slow) and its economic mobility (opportunity, support) will determine assimilation or
further segregation of the group. Following is an illustration of the theory.
Lack of progressive spatial, isolation and segregation
Using Newark’s history of spatial allocation of its neighborhoods as a backdrop, I will argue that the twin
process presented by Massey provides a potential explanation to the lack of progressive spatial assimilation of
some groups, especially African Americans. Any conflict intervention (top down) will most likely create more
resentment and is further from dealing with the root of the conflict. I will like to apply the twin process theory
suggested by Massey, as a way to deconstruct this immigration-segregation-poverty loop.
The twin process of immigrant settlement and socioeconomic mobility suggests that if’/when the group’s
socioeconomic status rises, immigrant have tended to move out of these enclaves into areas that offer improved
conditions—areas of progressive spatial assimilation into society. Newark has experienced this with the “white
flight” during the Depression and after the riots. Exodus of the rich and middle class has also been experienced
during other periods.
It also suggests that groups experiencing rapid in-migration and slow socioeconomic mobility will most likely
experience high levels of segregation. For instance, we can see the difference experiences between early Jews
immigrants and African Americans, both in Newark. Jews have, for the most part, moved out of Newark,
meanwhile African Americans have remained in their ghettos. Jews settled at a different rate than African
Americans. The quantity of the immigrant population of Jews was far less than the African American
immigrants’ influx. The Jews, as a community, offered support to their own and provided needed support (Ard,
2002).
By way of contrast, Massey found that, neither Hispanics nor Asians were hyper-segregated within any
metropolitan. African Americans, on the contrary, were not only settling in high numbers but were also coming
from a disadvantage place; segregation and the Jim Crow era. Blacks have traditionally experienced severe
prejudice and discrimination in urban housing markets. As they moved into urban areas from 1900 to 1960,
their segregation indices rose to unprecedented heights, compared with earlier times and groups (Massey,
2001). I strongly believe that one of the main challenges in Newark is to change the attitudes cemented during
the Jim Crow era; on both sides of the equation-African Americans and non-African Americans.
African Americans stayed in the ghettos. Such high indices of residential segregation implied a restriction of
opportunity for Blacks compared with other groups. Discriminatory barriers in urban housing markets meant
individuals were not treated equal. These ghettos isolate emotionally, mentally, socially, and financially its
inhabitants. The social construction and discrimination that come along the dynamics of the ghettos have a
lasting effect on its inhabitants and citizens at large. If we consider the twin processes as a potential explanation
of part Newark’s conflict, it will then be important to consider specific programs oriented to inclusion of people
that invest in Newark. Teaches Village (inhibitor) is a great example of this initiative. By maintaining the
interest of a wide variety of groups to live in Newark, somehow we can aim for integration and not segregation.
The way a group is spatially incorporated into society is as important to its socioeconomic well-being as the
manner in which it is incorporated into the labor force.
Newark needs to offer opportunities to the Youth-at-risk and these should be done at the grass-root level to
better connect with the community. Of course, there are no cookie-cutter-solutions, however there are very
specific angles to the conflict that can be tackle. The inclusion of NJPAC (New Jersey Performing Arts Center)
as part of Newark’s urban space facilitates the inclusion of people from other states and boroughs, other than for
employment. This space is also used to engage the community in outdoor concerts and as an educational
facility. I believe this spatial urban inclusion of art and celebration will have its positive effects in Newark. It
certainly deals with the perception of Newark- as a violent city; almost as an inhibitor to the negative and
debilitating image of Newark.
Thus the geographic structure of segregation that emerged early in the 20th
century was fully formed and stable
by 1970. Whites and Blacks were integrated at the state and county levels, but still segregated at the
neighborhood level.
When large Black communities are subject to high levels of segregation, intense racial isolation is inevitable.
group from amenities, opportunities, and resources that affect socioeconomic well-being. As high levels of
segregation accumulate across dimensions, however, the harmful effects of segregation multiply. Blacks are not
only more segregated than other groups on any single dimension of segregation; they are more segregated
across all dimensions simultaneously. People growing up in such an environment would have little direct
experience with the culture, norms, and behaviors of the rest of American society, and have few social contacts
with members of other racial groups. Also, socialization teaches us whether to engage in violence or to pursue
less destructive paths of action.
The long term consequences of segregation are not to be ignored as attractors of Newark’s conflict. According
to Massey, research permits three broad generalizations; neighborhoods seem to influence individual
development most powerfully in early childhood and late adolescence. Second, the spatial concentration of
affluence appears to be more important in academic achievement and determining cognitive development. We
can suggest that an environment that lacks prosperity can affect negatively cognitive environment. Also, he
found that the concentration of male joblessness affects social behavior more than cognitive development,
particularly among Blacks. Bourgeois also illustrates this point through In Search of Respect’s narratives.
Jim Crow effect
Jim Crow era is a wave of laws and customs–from 1870 lingering until the 1960’s – that mandated racial
segregation of the African Americans in the U.S. Although it was enforced for a longer period of time in the
South, in the North was implemented as a “de facto” law. Newark exhibited segregation. Long term
segregation forms long term attitudes. I believe that this attitudes and racism is deeply ingrained in the
idiosyncrasies of the American culture. If we take into consideration the dynamics of the twin processes and
coupled it with the Jim Crow effect, we can better understand the reasons why African Americans in Newark
have been in perpetual areas of conflict and violence.
Other things to consider; nature of violence
Given the persistent nature of violence and conflict in Newark and because it connects to all social institutions
and all social processes—from micro-level interactions between friends and family to the macro-level
aggressions, a basic, sociological understanding of this complex and multi-faceted concept is needed. There are
contradictions of violence that built resentment and exhibits unfairness. When coming from an authority and top
–down approach (i.e. a police officer shoots and kills an unarmed citizen), this might be acceptable and
justifiable for many. However, when it happens outside of this scenario, then its implications are treated highly
different. To say that context matters when it comes to violence also suggests that attitudes toward violence are
not uniform nor are they inherent; instead, people learn through patterns of socialization when to judge some
instances of violence as unacceptable and other forms as required. I suggest that the contradiction should be
addressed at a community level and by professionals. We need to account for the contradictions of violence.
The evolutionary biologist Stephen Jay Gould proposed theories that have many contradictions. However, he
brought to light an interesting need -to understand the nature of violence in society. He stated that violence is
biological since they represent one subset of a possible range of behaviors. By the same token, kindness and
peacefulness are just as biological—and we may see their influence increase if we can create social structures
that permit them to flourish. This supports the treatment of bringing good examples, needed support and
creating nourishing urban structures to inspire change. Historical facts such as racial strife, suburban flight, and
industrial abandonment propelled urban poverty. Poverty is the socio-economic status of the ghettos. Its
inhabitants become vulnerable to crime, violence, and corruption. This becomes an endless cycle within the
immigration-segregation-isolation hub. These coupled with segregation and its lingering effect has had the
effect of conflict and violence as a consequence in Newark. The way a group is spatially incorporated into
society is as important to its socioeconomic well-being as the manner in which it is incorporated into the labor
force, and education.
Moving ahead
I recommend additional research measuring attitudes, perceptions and pre-dispositions of Newarkers. We need
to understand the thinking and feelings of the target at hand before a strategy is implemented. The problem can
be tackle at a very micro-level and a macro-level.
The concept of violence has gain new dimensions. In 1996, the World Health Assembly declared violence a
major public health issue. The different types of violence include child abuse and neglect, youth violence,
intimate partner violence, sexual violence, elder abuse, self-directed violence, and collective violence. These
new dimensions – at a macro-level-should be observed in Newark to create protective factors and prevention
efforts.
Exhibit 1
Exhibit 2: Timeline Map of Newark
Exhibit 3
References
Bourgeois, P. (2003) In Search of Respect. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
Jackson, K. T., The Black Experience in Newark: The Growth of the Ghetto, 1870-1970. In New Jersey since 1860, ed.
William C. Wright. Trenton: New Jersey Historical Commission, 1972
Coleman, P. (2011) The Five Percent. Finding Solutions to Seemingly Impossible Conflicts. New York: Public Affairs.
Kennedy, David M. (2012) Don’t Shoot: One Man, a Street Fellowship, and the End of Violence in Inner-City America.
New York: Bloomsbury
Massey, D. 2001 “Residential Segregation and Neighborhood Conditions in U.S. Metropolitan Areas” From:
Smelser, Neil J., William Julius Wilson, and Faith Mitchell, Editors., America Becoming: Racial Trends and
Their Consequences. Volume I., Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press.
Tuttle, B. (2009) How Newark Became Newark: The Rise, Fall, and Rebirth of an American City. New Brunswick, N.J.
Rutgers University Press.
Gould, S. J. ( 1981) The Mismeasure of Man W. W. Norton & Co.
Selected Bibliography.
Goldstein, Daniel M. (2012) Outlawed. Between Security and Rights in a Bolivian City. Duke University.
Zilberg, Elana (2011) Space of Detention. The Making of a Transnational Gang Crisis between Los Angeles and San
Salvador. Duke University Press.
Orlando, Leoluca. Fighting the Mafia and Renewing Sicilian Culture.
Atkinson,J. The History of Newark, Newark; William B, Guild, 1878
Ard, P. (2002). The Jews of New Jersey: A Pictorial History, New Brubswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.
Woodard, K. (1999) A Nation within a Nation: Amiri Baraka (LeRoi Jones) and Black Power Politics. Chapel Hill:
University of North Carolina Press.
Lamb, M. (1876). Sketch of Newark. Harper’s new Monthly magazine (October)
Kaplns, H. (1963) Urban Renewal Politics. Slum Clearance in Newark. New York: Columbia University Press, 1963

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Understanding Newark’s conflict and violence within the scope of urban space and segregation

  • 1. Paper: Understanding Newark’s conflict and violence within the scope of urban space and segregation. Nieves L. Garcia Pimienta
  • 2. Introduction Violence in Newark has been a recurrent problem to the point of making violence a fixture in certain areas of this urban city. Undoubtedly, Newark today is perceived as a violent and a not-safe-city by many residents and outsiders. This perception has been fed by historical facts such as the 1967’s riots (Herman, 2014). However, as noted by others, the riots were an example of the culmination or one of the effects of subtleties –and not so subtle- sociological dynamics that have been happening since late 19th century and early 1900’s. In this paper, I review historical background and its lingering effects in Newark. I also apply Massey’s Twin Processes theory, as a possible explanation to the lack of upward mobility on certain communities. Background Mayor events in Newark have lured the attention, visit, and settlement of newcomers as well as domestic and international investments. By being the space of mayor historical turning points, it also provided the space for power-craving leaders, good and corrupted politicians, money-making investors and mafia-control-seekers. All these players and forces, as Peter Coleman explains, had and have a messy effect in the intractable conflict in Newark. These forces (and their actions) are attractors that intensify the magnitude and depth of the conflict. The Port of Newark opened around 1915 and it led the nation's shipbuilders during WWI. These years were significant because they brought the first large group of Southern blacks to northern U.S. As many in-migration, in search of jobs and defense-related jobs. Agricultural employment opportunities started to decline. By the 1930s, Newark was a major East Coast transportation hub with substantial retail, and manufacturing businesses. Newark’s Golden Era started to decline soon after the beginning the Great Depression. Employment dropped in Newark by 25% between January and November of 1930 (Tuttle, 2009). A corrupt local government undermined city services, commutable highways facilitated rich and middle class city residents to move to the suburbs, and the tax base eroded as some important industries relocated. Economic disadvantage groups had little to no option to relocate. Disadvantage communities, the poor and poor African Americans, had little to no change in relocating. Critical moments of historical weight in this analysis are; the Golden Era, it places Newark on the map. After reaching a peak of 442,337 residents counted in the 1930 Census, the city's population saw a decline of nearly 40% as residents moved to surrounding suburbs. Prohibition, it provoked corruption and the growth of organized crime. The Great Depression signaled the beginning of the urban decline and provoked the exodus of the upper class and the working class. There is a shift; Newark’s inhabitants changed from the working class to the poorest class. The Industrial Revolution, World War I, and World War II, generated influxes of investments, job opportunities and increased immigration. It also kept organized crime and corruption at the heart of Newark’s government and business dynamics (Tuttle, 2009). The 1967 riots caused the exodus of whites and the new middle class from Newark and stigmatized Newark for the long run. Newark, seen as a violent city, is also a fact-driven statement. Newark’s crime rate, violence trajectory (Exhibit 1) and its history has hindered several attempts to revamp Newark’s safety and image. As mentioned, Newark’s riots of 1967 pitted residents of the city’s predominantly black neighborhoods against mostly white police and military forces. Furthermore, according to Data.com, a private social networking and information website, Newark has had a constant above-average crime and violent crime rate when compared with other urban areas in the U.S. To address all reasons of Newark’s persistent violence would be comprehensive, aspect-wide debatable and of readable length. Throughout its history, there have been several attempts to revitalize Newark. However, however, I will focus my narrative in the ingrained subtleties that I suggest, have perpetuated conflict
  • 3. in Newark. As Peter Coleman suggests in Five Percent, to address conflict through a simple story is dangerous; conflict, as he states, involves a complex story. As an initial framework, and a broad representation of Newark’s dynamics, I have included a timeline map of Newark’s main events within the scope of urban space and economy (Exhibit 2; Map Timeline). It is based on Coleman’s mapping approach. According to Coleman, there are powerful forces at work in these types of situations shaping what people see, feel, think, and do. In other words; intractability happens when the many different components of a conflict collapse together into one mass, into one very simple ‘us versus them’ story that effectively resists change. The timeline map identifies broad connections (urban space and economy; attractors and inhibitors) that have contributed, in my opinion, in a very fundamental way to Newark’s complex dynamics resulting in an increase or decrease in violence. There are several loops within this framework (Exhibit 3); however I suggest placing attention to the loop involving segregation and ghettos. I will further analyze one of the loops specifically involving the element of segregation, exodus of inhabitants, ghettos, housing and its characteristics. I will deconstruct this relationship in more detail to provide a deeper understanding of Newark’s attractors/inhibitors of conflict, aiming for a potential treatment of the problem. I will discuss this loop to further understand the psychological, social, and community-based aspects of conflict escalation and intractability. This paper argues the importance, long term effects and implications that segregation –racial, social, financial, and physical- and immigration and its specific dynamics as long standing attractors of Newark’s history of urban conflict and violence. Segregation The ghetto phenomena had been present since Newark’s beginnings (i.e. Jewish, Italian, German, and African Americans enclaves). However, African American ghettos were solidified by segregation customs. Mandated or de facto, segregation justified the increased physical separation and isolation of the African Americans in Newark, making this group the poorest and most disadvantage group in Newark. The burgeoning prosperity of the 1950s masked deep racial divisions and inequalities that simmered, waiting for the tipping point. These circumstances bring tension, hence conflict. Again, in the 1950s, the migration to the suburbs appeared mainly to involve white Newark residents leaving the bustle and the increasing crime of the inner city. Middle class African Americans followed, leaving African Americans working in in low-paying factory jobs as the main inhabitant of Newark. By 1966, African Americans were the majority of population, but government offices and the police department were dominated by whites. There was economic and political imbalance. These circumstances (lack of representation) also brought tension, hence it contributes to conflict. Newark is not an isolated case of economic growth followed by large influxes of immigration. Throughout US history, racial and ethnic groups arriving into areas of economic growth have settled in urban areas or places
  • 4. close to urban areas. These areas are usually containers of old housing, poor services, and low or decreasing socioeconomic status. This was experienced by the Irish, Germans, Jews, and Italians arriving into Newark in the early 1900’s. Newark, because of its location -entry port of businesses- offered business opportunity as well as employment to many immigrants. Upon arrival, immigrants settled in ghettos creating cultural and socio- economic enclaves. With time, many immigrants moved outside their enclaves into more assimilated progressive areas. However, many Blacks remained isolated and segregated. One has to deconstruct this different outcome in this specific group. Segregation and its effects De jure segregation, enforced by law, was stopped in the United States by federal enforcement of a series of Supreme Court decisions after Brown v. Board of Education in 1954. Its elimination lasted through much of the 1950s, and 1960s. I argue that these laws have a lasting effect in attitudes even when these laws are lifted. As supporting evidence, it has been noticed that the Fair Housing Act of 1968 theoretically put an end to discrimination; however, residential segregation proved to be remarkably persistent (Massey and Denton, 1993:186-216). Attitudes toward segregation and discrimination have been present; antagonism, frustration and conflict follow as a natural way to response to unfairness. In a very real way, barriers to spatial mobility become barriers to social mobility; social mobility barriers eliminate opportunities to the isolated. Lack upward social mobility prevents the economic growth of the group. Therefore segregation could and has perpetuated poverty. The poor becomes vulnerable to corruption, crime, and illicit activities as a way of life to survive, as strongly illustrated by Bourgeois through In Search of Respect’s narratives. Therefore, we can suggest that segregation is directly related to crime and violence in more than one way. First, crime becomes an alternative to economic survival; second, when a group is isolated and unexposed to other processes of socialization, their attitudes are strengthen since they copy perceived realities, attitudes, interpretations, and ways of resolving situations (i.e. illicit dealings, crime) from their surroundings (enclaves and ghettos). Their attitudes tend to be reinforced by peers, older generations, and due to the isolation that segregation brings. Through isolation, poverty, and crime are perpetuated; crime leads to conflict. As illustrated by Massey, when large Black communities are subject to high levels of segregation, intense racial isolation is inevitable. He further illustrates how 20 years after the Fair Housing Act, Blacks were still unlikely to come into residential contact with members of other groups. He concludes that the large ghettos of the North have remained substantially intact and were largely unaffected by Civil Rights legislation of the 1960s. He concludes that Black communities are still isolated and remain a very residentially segregated group (Massey, 2001). Massey compared Europeans and Blacks immigrants’ experiences and offered an explanation for its differences. His claim offers a noble way of understanding the different paths amongst the different immigrant groups; this theory is called the twin processes. This theory suggests that quantity (how many immigrants), period of time of the influx (rapid/slow) and its economic mobility (opportunity, support) will determine assimilation or further segregation of the group. Following is an illustration of the theory.
  • 5. Lack of progressive spatial, isolation and segregation Using Newark’s history of spatial allocation of its neighborhoods as a backdrop, I will argue that the twin process presented by Massey provides a potential explanation to the lack of progressive spatial assimilation of some groups, especially African Americans. Any conflict intervention (top down) will most likely create more resentment and is further from dealing with the root of the conflict. I will like to apply the twin process theory suggested by Massey, as a way to deconstruct this immigration-segregation-poverty loop. The twin process of immigrant settlement and socioeconomic mobility suggests that if’/when the group’s socioeconomic status rises, immigrant have tended to move out of these enclaves into areas that offer improved conditions—areas of progressive spatial assimilation into society. Newark has experienced this with the “white flight” during the Depression and after the riots. Exodus of the rich and middle class has also been experienced during other periods. It also suggests that groups experiencing rapid in-migration and slow socioeconomic mobility will most likely experience high levels of segregation. For instance, we can see the difference experiences between early Jews immigrants and African Americans, both in Newark. Jews have, for the most part, moved out of Newark, meanwhile African Americans have remained in their ghettos. Jews settled at a different rate than African Americans. The quantity of the immigrant population of Jews was far less than the African American immigrants’ influx. The Jews, as a community, offered support to their own and provided needed support (Ard, 2002). By way of contrast, Massey found that, neither Hispanics nor Asians were hyper-segregated within any metropolitan. African Americans, on the contrary, were not only settling in high numbers but were also coming from a disadvantage place; segregation and the Jim Crow era. Blacks have traditionally experienced severe prejudice and discrimination in urban housing markets. As they moved into urban areas from 1900 to 1960,
  • 6. their segregation indices rose to unprecedented heights, compared with earlier times and groups (Massey, 2001). I strongly believe that one of the main challenges in Newark is to change the attitudes cemented during the Jim Crow era; on both sides of the equation-African Americans and non-African Americans. African Americans stayed in the ghettos. Such high indices of residential segregation implied a restriction of opportunity for Blacks compared with other groups. Discriminatory barriers in urban housing markets meant individuals were not treated equal. These ghettos isolate emotionally, mentally, socially, and financially its inhabitants. The social construction and discrimination that come along the dynamics of the ghettos have a lasting effect on its inhabitants and citizens at large. If we consider the twin processes as a potential explanation of part Newark’s conflict, it will then be important to consider specific programs oriented to inclusion of people that invest in Newark. Teaches Village (inhibitor) is a great example of this initiative. By maintaining the interest of a wide variety of groups to live in Newark, somehow we can aim for integration and not segregation. The way a group is spatially incorporated into society is as important to its socioeconomic well-being as the manner in which it is incorporated into the labor force. Newark needs to offer opportunities to the Youth-at-risk and these should be done at the grass-root level to better connect with the community. Of course, there are no cookie-cutter-solutions, however there are very specific angles to the conflict that can be tackle. The inclusion of NJPAC (New Jersey Performing Arts Center) as part of Newark’s urban space facilitates the inclusion of people from other states and boroughs, other than for employment. This space is also used to engage the community in outdoor concerts and as an educational facility. I believe this spatial urban inclusion of art and celebration will have its positive effects in Newark. It certainly deals with the perception of Newark- as a violent city; almost as an inhibitor to the negative and debilitating image of Newark. Thus the geographic structure of segregation that emerged early in the 20th century was fully formed and stable by 1970. Whites and Blacks were integrated at the state and county levels, but still segregated at the neighborhood level. When large Black communities are subject to high levels of segregation, intense racial isolation is inevitable. group from amenities, opportunities, and resources that affect socioeconomic well-being. As high levels of segregation accumulate across dimensions, however, the harmful effects of segregation multiply. Blacks are not only more segregated than other groups on any single dimension of segregation; they are more segregated across all dimensions simultaneously. People growing up in such an environment would have little direct experience with the culture, norms, and behaviors of the rest of American society, and have few social contacts with members of other racial groups. Also, socialization teaches us whether to engage in violence or to pursue less destructive paths of action. The long term consequences of segregation are not to be ignored as attractors of Newark’s conflict. According to Massey, research permits three broad generalizations; neighborhoods seem to influence individual development most powerfully in early childhood and late adolescence. Second, the spatial concentration of affluence appears to be more important in academic achievement and determining cognitive development. We can suggest that an environment that lacks prosperity can affect negatively cognitive environment. Also, he found that the concentration of male joblessness affects social behavior more than cognitive development, particularly among Blacks. Bourgeois also illustrates this point through In Search of Respect’s narratives.
  • 7. Jim Crow effect Jim Crow era is a wave of laws and customs–from 1870 lingering until the 1960’s – that mandated racial segregation of the African Americans in the U.S. Although it was enforced for a longer period of time in the South, in the North was implemented as a “de facto” law. Newark exhibited segregation. Long term segregation forms long term attitudes. I believe that this attitudes and racism is deeply ingrained in the idiosyncrasies of the American culture. If we take into consideration the dynamics of the twin processes and coupled it with the Jim Crow effect, we can better understand the reasons why African Americans in Newark have been in perpetual areas of conflict and violence. Other things to consider; nature of violence Given the persistent nature of violence and conflict in Newark and because it connects to all social institutions and all social processes—from micro-level interactions between friends and family to the macro-level aggressions, a basic, sociological understanding of this complex and multi-faceted concept is needed. There are contradictions of violence that built resentment and exhibits unfairness. When coming from an authority and top –down approach (i.e. a police officer shoots and kills an unarmed citizen), this might be acceptable and justifiable for many. However, when it happens outside of this scenario, then its implications are treated highly different. To say that context matters when it comes to violence also suggests that attitudes toward violence are not uniform nor are they inherent; instead, people learn through patterns of socialization when to judge some instances of violence as unacceptable and other forms as required. I suggest that the contradiction should be addressed at a community level and by professionals. We need to account for the contradictions of violence. The evolutionary biologist Stephen Jay Gould proposed theories that have many contradictions. However, he brought to light an interesting need -to understand the nature of violence in society. He stated that violence is biological since they represent one subset of a possible range of behaviors. By the same token, kindness and peacefulness are just as biological—and we may see their influence increase if we can create social structures that permit them to flourish. This supports the treatment of bringing good examples, needed support and creating nourishing urban structures to inspire change. Historical facts such as racial strife, suburban flight, and industrial abandonment propelled urban poverty. Poverty is the socio-economic status of the ghettos. Its inhabitants become vulnerable to crime, violence, and corruption. This becomes an endless cycle within the immigration-segregation-isolation hub. These coupled with segregation and its lingering effect has had the effect of conflict and violence as a consequence in Newark. The way a group is spatially incorporated into society is as important to its socioeconomic well-being as the manner in which it is incorporated into the labor force, and education.
  • 8. Moving ahead I recommend additional research measuring attitudes, perceptions and pre-dispositions of Newarkers. We need to understand the thinking and feelings of the target at hand before a strategy is implemented. The problem can be tackle at a very micro-level and a macro-level. The concept of violence has gain new dimensions. In 1996, the World Health Assembly declared violence a major public health issue. The different types of violence include child abuse and neglect, youth violence, intimate partner violence, sexual violence, elder abuse, self-directed violence, and collective violence. These new dimensions – at a macro-level-should be observed in Newark to create protective factors and prevention efforts.
  • 10. Exhibit 2: Timeline Map of Newark
  • 12. References Bourgeois, P. (2003) In Search of Respect. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press Jackson, K. T., The Black Experience in Newark: The Growth of the Ghetto, 1870-1970. In New Jersey since 1860, ed. William C. Wright. Trenton: New Jersey Historical Commission, 1972 Coleman, P. (2011) The Five Percent. Finding Solutions to Seemingly Impossible Conflicts. New York: Public Affairs. Kennedy, David M. (2012) Don’t Shoot: One Man, a Street Fellowship, and the End of Violence in Inner-City America. New York: Bloomsbury Massey, D. 2001 “Residential Segregation and Neighborhood Conditions in U.S. Metropolitan Areas” From: Smelser, Neil J., William Julius Wilson, and Faith Mitchell, Editors., America Becoming: Racial Trends and Their Consequences. Volume I., Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press. Tuttle, B. (2009) How Newark Became Newark: The Rise, Fall, and Rebirth of an American City. New Brunswick, N.J. Rutgers University Press. Gould, S. J. ( 1981) The Mismeasure of Man W. W. Norton & Co. Selected Bibliography. Goldstein, Daniel M. (2012) Outlawed. Between Security and Rights in a Bolivian City. Duke University. Zilberg, Elana (2011) Space of Detention. The Making of a Transnational Gang Crisis between Los Angeles and San Salvador. Duke University Press. Orlando, Leoluca. Fighting the Mafia and Renewing Sicilian Culture. Atkinson,J. The History of Newark, Newark; William B, Guild, 1878 Ard, P. (2002). The Jews of New Jersey: A Pictorial History, New Brubswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press. Woodard, K. (1999) A Nation within a Nation: Amiri Baraka (LeRoi Jones) and Black Power Politics. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. Lamb, M. (1876). Sketch of Newark. Harper’s new Monthly magazine (October) Kaplns, H. (1963) Urban Renewal Politics. Slum Clearance in Newark. New York: Columbia University Press, 1963