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Metropolitan Detroit's Diverse Population: A Closer Look
1. Metropolitan Detroit’s Diverse
Population: A Closer Look
presentation for
Detroit Orientation Institute
and
Inside Detroit
Kurt Metzger
Director
Data Driven Detroit (D3)
April 14, 2010
2.
3.
4.
5. The national media are telling a half-century story as if it
unfolded over a few years, and, in the process, they're
missing important explanations and underpinnings.
The truth is, we've struggled with leadership around here for
at least the last half-century, if not longer. And that's where we
half-
should be embarrassed by the similarities between the 1961
Time story and today's coverage.
How can we have learned so little over so long? What does it
say about leadership -- or our ability to choose leaders -- that
we're facing the same issues today that confronted us before
men walked on the moon?
6. The Transformation of Detroit
“No one social program or policy, A number of historical and
no single force, whether housing contemporary policies and
segregation, social welfare structural factors created
programs or deindustrialization, today’s conditions in Detroit
could have driven Detroit and other
cities like it from their position of
economic and political dominance;
there is no simple explanation for
the inequality and marginality that
beset the urban poor. It is only
through the complex and
interwoven histories of race,
residence and work in the postwar
era that the state of today’s cities
and their impoverished residents
can be fully understood and
confronted.”
– Thomas J. Sugrue, The Origins
of the Urban Crisis: Race and
Inequality in Postwar Detroit.
Page 5
15. Figure 6
Net Flow of Domestic Migration
Southeast Michigan, 1995-2000 5,000
35,000 15,000
St. Clair
4,000
2,000 7,000
7,000
Oakland Macomb
Livingston
16,000 5,000
6,000 10,000 15,000
1,000
4,000 Detroit
Balance
Washtenaw of Wayne
18,000
7,000 18,000
1,500 100
32,000
3,000
Arrows extending beyond the Southeast Michigan
Monroe boundary represent the net flow of domestic
migration between the specific county/area and
U.S. counties outside the region.
In net terms, 32,000 more persons moved from the
Balance of Wayne County to U.S. counties outside
the region, from 1995–2000.
500
Note: Numbers shown represent the net flow of persons age five and older. Net flows between non-adjacent counties areas in
Southeast Michigan are less than 2,000. For purposes of map clarity, these net flows are not shown.
Source: U.S. Census Bureau.
?? - Migration and its Impact on Southeast Michigan, 1990-2003