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SDNews.com
Home Features

By the numbers: How diverse is your neighborhood?

Leonardo Castaneda by Leonardo Castaneda
December 19, 2014
in Features, News, Uptown News
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By the numbers: How diverse is your neighborhood?

By Leonardo Castaneda | inewsource

When Tau Baraka was growing up, southeastern San Diego was already a pretty diverse community. Baraka, now 47 and the owner of Imperial Barbershop in Encanto, said that back then the area was primarily white, African-American and Hispanic.

“But as the years start progressing, you start seeing a big change in that, especially with the Filipino population here,” Baraka said.

Now, neighborhoods in southeastern San Diego, including Encanto, Paradise Hills and Skyline, are home to sizable Filipino, Samoan, and West and East African populations. An inewsource analysis of 2010 census data found that Encanto is the most diverse community in San Diego.

Further north, communities such as Kensington and Normal Heights are more diverse than average. They rank, respectively, as the 17th and 14th most diverse communities in San Diego. That diversity starts to drop off in the more western neighborhoods in the city such as North Park and Uptown.

Screen shot 2014-12-19 at 9.53.26 AMWhen many people hear the word diversity, they tend to think “minorities.” But the diversity index used here gives the term new perspective.

Think about it like this: What are the chances you’ll walk out of your house and run into someone of a different race and ethnicity? If the chances are high, your neighborhood is diverse.

For example, Normal Heights has a diversity index of 0.59. That means there’s a 59 percent chance that you’ll randomly run into someone of a different race and ethnicity.

A low score on the diversity index doesn’t necessarily mean a community is mostly white. San Ysidro has a diversity index of 0.30. It’s an overwhelmingly minority neighborhood with a 93 percent Hispanic population.

The increasing diversity in neighborhoods in east and southeastern San Diego doesn’t surprise John Weeks, director of the International Population Center at San Diego State. Historically, areas east of Downtown have had a mix of low rents and close proximity to jobs in the city’s center, Weeks said.

That combination of low rent and location made those neighborhoods attractive to new immigrants. Greater Golden Hill, for example, is still a relatively diverse community with an index of 0.54.

What follows, Weeks said, is what is known as the pioneer effect. That’s when a small group of immigrants moves into a city or neighborhood where no one of their race lives. These “pioneers” open shops and restaurants, selling goods and food from back home. That attracts more people from their home country to that same neighborhood.

“When you have an unusual concentration, then that provides the likely spot where people will live because the pioneer migrants are already there,” Weeks said. “It’s a little bit easier to get adjusted to life in the United States in an area where you know the people who are like you are already living.”

The diversity index

For this analysis, we looked at diversity as a balance of racial and ethnic groups, not just the presence of specific minorities. To achieve that, we used a diversity index developed by journalists at USA Today. The index provides a number between 0 and 1, with the higher numbers indicating greater diversity.

The index allows for more accurate comparisons of diversity across neighborhoods. However, the census data can sometimes underestimate the diversity in a neighborhood, SDSU’s Weeks said.

Take, for example, Iraqi immigrants in San Diego. Weeks said that although they represent a distinct ethnic group, they don’t show up that way in census data that set diversity categories in the 19th century.

When the census asks those Iraqi immigrants to describe themselves, they likely mark themselves as not Hispanic and white, said Weeks. However, culturally and ethnically they are different from the European descendants most associated with non-Hispanic whites. That lack of nuance, Weeks said, can make it hard “to spot that type of diversity in the community.”

Despite limitations of the data used to calculate the diversity index, it provides a unique way of looking at specific neighborhoods.

Baraka sees that diversity every day at his Encanto barbershop.

“You go outside these doors, you see the world walking past. You sit here long enough, you see the world coming in,” he said. 

Less diversity at the coast

If the eastern part of San Diego is the most diverse, the coast is the most homogenous. And in this case, homogenous does mean mostly white.

Point Loma, Ocean Beach and La Jolla are among the least diverse neighborhoods in the city. Ocean Beach, for example, is 80 percent white and has a diversity index of 0.24. That makes it the fifth least diverse community in San Diego.

Although separated from the coast by the Midway-Pacific Highway area, Uptown is also in the least-diverse quarter of San Diego neighborhoods. However, with a diversity index of 0.35 it’s still more diverse than some of the neighboring communities to its immediate north and west.

Weeks said that cost of living drives the diversity makeup along the coast.

“The coast has become so expensive that in order to live there you’ve got to have a lot of money,” Weeks said. “And at this moment in time, the majority of people that have a lot of money that can afford to live on the coast tend to be white non-Hispanics.”

Weeks thinks that as incomes rise in the diverse eastern parts of San Diego, those residents will also move out to the coast. That could lead to a more balanced map of diversity in the region.

inewsource is an independent nonprofit dedicated to satisfying a need for credible, in-depth, data-driven journalism on the web, radio and TV.

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