Separate Remains Unequal: Contemporary Segregation and Racial Disparities in School District Revenue

Year of Publication: 
2019

Resource exposure is believed to be a key mechanism linking patterns of racial segregation and student outcomes during the Brown v. Board of Education era. Decades later, literature suggests that past progress on school desegregation may have stalled, raising concerns about resource equity and associated student outcomes. Are recent trends in segregation associated with racial disparities in school resources? Drawing on national data from the School Funding Fairness Data System and the Common Core of Data, this study examines the partial association between contemporary patterns of segregation between districts within a state and racial disparities in school district revenue over time. We find that increases in racial segregation, net of racial socioeconomic segregation and other racial differences between districts, are associated with racial disparities in revenue. These findings suggest that purportedly race neutral funding formulas and policies may not be completely race neutral and could be reproducing social inequality.

Primary Research Area:

APA Citation

Weathers, E.S., & Sosina, V.E. (2019). Separate Remains Unequal: Contemporary Segregation and Racial Disparities in School District Revenue.