Massey

DOUGLAS S. MASSEY

Office of Population Research
Princeton University
Wallace Hall
Princeton, NJ 08544
609-258-4949
dmassey@princeton.edu

WHY IS INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION INCREASING AND WHY IS RESIDENTIAL SEGREGATION SO HARMFUL?

By the late 20th century, every developed country had become an immigrant-receiving society, drawing migrants primarily from the developing world. Return to Aztlan focused on the social mechanisms promoting and sustaining emigration from Mexico to the United States. Worlds in Motion: Understanding International Migration at the End of the Millennium developed a theoretical synthesis to account for immigration. Beyond Smoke and Mirrors: Mexican Immigration in an Age of Economic Integration used the same theoretical framework to analyze the history of Mexico-U.S. migration, offer a critique of past U.S. policies, and suggest avenues for future reform.

African Americans are uniquely segregated in American cities, and since the publication of American Apartheid, I have been working on the consequences of segregation for African Americans and Latinos of African ancestry. Segregation figured prominently in explanations for black underachievement in the Source of the River, and it interacts with shifts in the U.S. income distribution to yield a rising concentration of poverty that, in turn, intensifies social disorder and violence that undermines the health of African Americans, reduces their life expectancy, and impairs their cognitive development

CURRICULUM VITA (pdf)

SELECTED PUBLICATIONS:

Massey, Douglas S. 2005. Return of the L-Word: A Liberal Vision for the New Century. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

Massey, Douglas S.. 2005. Strangers in a Strange Land: Humans in an Urbanizing World. New York: Norton Publishers.

Massey, Douglas S., Camille Z. Charles, Garvey Lundy, and Mary F. Fischer. 2003. Source of the River: The Social Origins of Freshmen at America's Selective Colleges and Universities. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

Durand, Jorge, and Douglas S. Massey. 2002. Beyond Smoke and Mirrors: Mexican Immigration in an Age of Economic Integration. New York: Russell Sage Foundation. Massey, Douglas S., and Jorge Durand. 1993. American Apartheid: Segregation and the Making of the Underclass. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

FACULTY

ALEJANDRO PORTES
ELIZABETH M. ARMSTRONG
MIGUEL CENTENO
PAUL DI MAGGIO
MITCHELL DUNEIER
THOMAS J. ESPENSHADE
PATRICIA FERNANDEZ-KELLY
JOSH GOLDSTEIN
SCOTT M. LYNCH
DOUGLAS S. MASSEY
SARA MCLANAHAN
KATHERINE S. NEWMAN
DEVAH PAGER
GILBERT ROZMAN
MARTIN RUEF
KIM LANE SCHEPPELE
MARIO LUIS SMALL
PAUL STARR
HOWARD TAYLOR
MARTA TIENDA
BRUCE WESTERN
ROBERT WUTHNOW
KING-TO YEUNG
VIVIANA A. ZELIZER

FACULTY LIBRARY