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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2016 Jun 1.
Published in final edited form as: Demography. 2015 Jun;52(3):1025–1034. doi: 10.1007/s13524-015-0381-6

Table 2.

Hypersegregated metropolitan areas in 2010

Unevenness Isolation Clustering Concentration Centralization Average
High Score on All Five Dimensions
   Baltimore 64.3 62.4 62.6 79.1 79.1 69.5
   Birmingham 65.2 62.6 78.3 68.3 79.3 70.7
   Chicago 75.2 64.8 86.3 79.1 79.6 77.0
   Cleveland 72.6 64.7 80.6 85.4 81.9 77.0
   Detroit 74.0 70.0 82.6 86.2 74.6 77.5
   Flint 67.3 61.7 84.2 80.1 84.1 75.5
   Milwaukee 79.6 65.5 100.0 87.1 91.2 84.7
   St. Louis 70.6 62.0 75.9 87.3 91.2 77.4
   Average 71.1 64.2 81.3 81.6 82.6 76.2
High Score on Four Dimensions
   Boston 61.5 31.1 64.8 75.2 79.2 62.4
   Chattanooga 63.0 48.6 66.8 78.8 62.6 64.0
   Dayton 63.3 55.1 63.4 70.4 76.7 65.8
   Gadsden 66.4 47.0 67.2 81.7 81.4 68.7
   Hartford 62.3 35.4 80.5 71.1 70.7 64.0
   Kansas City 58.6 43.3 52.1 86.5 88.1 65.7
   Mobile 59.0 62.2 42.0 68.4 72.6 60.8
   Monroe 63.4 66.7 62.6 51.7 71.6 63.2
   New York 76.9 51.3 78.6 80.6 83.6 74.2
   Philadelphia 67.0 55.8 85.0 69.7 70.0 69.5
   Rochester 63.0 40.3 98.9 75.7 78.6 71.3
   Syracuse 64.6 37.5 69.0 83.7 87.5 68.5
   Winston-Salem 56.1 43.4 55.4 74.8 81.2 62.2
   Average 63.5 47.5 68.2 74.5 77.2 66.2