Open Access
American Research Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences
ISSN (Online): 2378-7031
DOI: 10.46568/arjhss
The Lasting Impact of Redlining: How Historical Housing Policies Shaped Educational Inequality in New Jersey’s Urban School Districts
Abstract
This paper investigates redlining’s lasting impact on educational opportunity in Newark, Camden, and Paterson, New
Jersey. Redlining, implemented by the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation in the 1930s, systematically denied mortgage
financing to predominantly Black and immigrant neighborhoods, creating patterns of segregation that persist today.
Although outlawed in 1968, its consequences remain embedded in New Jersey’s educational landscape through property
tax-dependent funding, municipal fragmentation, and intergenerational wealth disparities. Analysis reveals educational
disadvantages in all three cities: academic performance rates lag significantly behind state averages, districts face
persistent teacher shortages, and per-pupil funding gaps persist. Despite increased state aid, urban districts allocate
disproportionate resources to social challenges that suburban schools rarely encounter, limiting enrichment investments.
New Jersey remains among the most educationally segregated states, with municipal and district boundaries reinforcing
geographic and racial isolation. Examining integration models from Connecticut, Massachusetts, Minnesota, and Maryland
demonstrates that voluntary transfer programs, state financial incentives, and housing integration policies offer viable
pathways toward educational equity. The study concludes that overcoming the legacy of redlining requires comprehensive
reforms, including regional governance models, equitable funding systems, and the removal of exclusionary housing and
district boundaries, to ensure equal educational opportunity for all children.