Maps showing "population distribution and change, age, nativity, race, and income, occupation, education, housing and social problems," are based on census and other governmental data
Shows the "general social-economic level of 166 communities" in Macomb, Oakland, and Wayne counties through fourteen indices, as income, value of home, occupational level, disrupted marriages, housing conditions."
"Attorney-at-law and Solicitor in Chancery at the Detroit Bar" editorializes on relation of the Negro to labor organizations, and on the progress of the race.
Lists many individuals, as ministers, homeowners, firsts in various employment cateogries; describes several interracial episodes, evidently using newspapers as sources.
Analyzes "ecomomic setting, employment, relief and emergency work, housing, health, hosptials, insurance, crime and juvenille delinquency, education, Negro business and professional pursuits, churches and social agencies," by means of interviews with…
Uses Flint Youth Study data to make structural functional analysis of delinquency among two samples of lower class Negro boys, aged twelve to seventeen, one with several police contacts per boy, the other with none.
Finds response of 704 students at five universities, including Wayne and Michigan, to anger-provoking situations to be more affected by cultural than by racial membership.
Wayne County Juvenile Court judge, after studying data on seven hundred children admitted to the Wayne County Youth Home in July, 1967, discusses social causes of riots.