de facto segregation

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de facto segregation

De facto segregation is evident in the neighborhood's elementary school.

Definition
  1. Noun:
    • Segregation that occurs in practice or reality, despite not being mandated or enforced by law: This term specifically describes the separation of groups, particularly racial groups, in institutions like schools, housing, or public facilities, which results from social, economic, or individual actions and patterns rather than from legal statutes.
Usage and Examples
  • Noun:
    • The city's neighborhoods exhibited de facto segregation due to decades of discriminatory housing policies and economic inequality.
    • Despite laws against it, de facto segregation persisted in many school districts because of residential patterns.
    • The report analyzed the causes and effects of de facto segregation in the workplace.
Advanced Usage and Notes
  • Legal vs. De Facto Distinction: This term is often used in contrast to "de jure segregation," which is segregation that is explicitly required or permitted by law. "De facto segregation" highlights how systemic inequality can persist even after discriminatory laws are repealed.
  • Contexts: While historically and commonly associated with racial segregation in U.S. schools and housing, the concept can apply to any form of involuntary separation of groups (e.g., by socioeconomic class, ethnicity) that exists in practice without legal backing.
Variants and Related Words
  • De jure segregation (n): Segregation that is imposed or allowed by law.
  • Segregation (n): The general act or practice of separating people or groups from others.
  • Integration (n): The process of bringing people or groups together into equal participation, often presented as the opposite goal of overcoming segregation.
Synonyms
  • Practical segregation
  • Segregation in fact
  • Segregation in practice
Antonyms
  • De jure integration
  • Legal integration
  • Formal integration
Related Phrases and Concepts
  • "De facto" (adverb/adjective): A Latin phrase meaning "in fact" or "in reality," used to describe a state of affairs that exists in practice whether or not it is officially recognized.
    • He was the de facto leader of the community, though he held no official title.
  • "Residential segregation": A common form of de facto segregation where groups live separately in different neighborhoods.
  • "Institutional segregation": Segregation maintained by the policies and practices of institutions.
de facto segregation

De facto segregation is evident in the neighborhood's elementary school.

Noun
  1. segregation (especially in schools) that happens in fact although not required by law