Respuesta :

Answer:

Redlining, the practice of avoiding fiscal investment in areas with a high minority population, stops any sort of economic progression in that area. If people or companies do not invest in those communities, then their economic deficiencies will not go away and they will continue to struggle. This contributes to institutional racism because it creates a system in which, if you were born in those poor communities, you will have been set up for failure as the lack of investment leads to worse schools, worse public spaces, worse jobs, etc. Racial steering, the practice of steering minorities(typically black) away from wealthy real-estate, creates areas of bad real-estate that only minorities live in. This segregates good housing in good areas like suburbs and nice parts of the cities for only white people, whereas the poorly run and low-value housing go to black people. This contributes to institutional racism because if you are black you were more likely to be born in these poor areas, so you had less wealth coming into the world.

Explanation:

They are both practices that economically discriminate against black and brown minorities as they live in areas with less money put into them, so they have fewer resources as a result.

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