Millennium City: Richard M. Daley & Global ChicagoMain MenuChicago in 1989Richard M. DaleyA Livable CityDiversity and NeighborhoodsGlobal ChicagoInto the MillenniumAboutComplete Interviews and TranscriptsBiographies of and links to each full-lenth interview and corresponding transcript.David Greensteinc7fc3212990439fbd3c1dd961272d52f1519d8e6Dan Harpereff3db32ed95b3efe91d381826e2c10c145cd452Larissa Mukundwa0c6cb03c337751b5774fa39d09352cf04aec006eUniversity of Illinois at Chicago Library
NOTE: African-American Exodus from Chicago
12020-07-07T11:31:14-05:00Dan Harpereff3db32ed95b3efe91d381826e2c10c145cd45254Between the Great Migration and Growing Exodus: The Future of Black Chicago?plain2020-11-10T16:31:15-06:00Dan Harpereff3db32ed95b3efe91d381826e2c10c145cd452Scarborough, William, Ivan Arenas, and Amanda E. Lewis. "Between the Great Migration and Growing Exodus: The Future of Black Chicago?" Institute for Research on Race and Policy, University of Illinois at Chicago, January 2020. Page 1.
This page is referenced by:
12020-04-16T17:43:45-05:00Demographic Transformations40plain2021-01-26T14:14:00-06:00Daley's tenure as mayor coincided with a decrease in Chicago's Black population. From 1980 through 2020, approximately 350,000 people left the city.
Avis LaVelle, Daley’s press secretary (1989-1992), Barack Obama, U.S. president (2009-2017), and William Daley, the mayor's brother, comment on those demographic changes: U.S. President Barack Obama (2009-2017) comments further: