Abstract

E c o n o m i s t s have generally shown little interest in the enclaves concentrated mainly in urban areas where most nonwhites of America live and carry on the ordinary business of life. It is not surprising, then, that economic development is neither clearly defined nor f o r m a l l y recognized in the literature of economics. Nevertheless :, at least the technical dimensions of the subject can be studied from the perspectives of urban and regional economics. However, this review of the literature attempts to identify the broader interdisciplinary, as well as the social and political character of the process of ghetto economic development.

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