This is a list of ethnic enclaves in various countries of different ethnic and cultural backgrounds to the native population. An ethnic enclave in this context denotes an area primarily populated by a population with similar ethnic or racial background. This list also includes concentrations rather than enclaves, and historic examples which may no longer be an ethnic enclave.[9]
Quick Facts Ethnic enclaves in North American cities ...
List of African-American neighborhoods - Thousands of African-American neighborhoods exist today. However, many of these communities are now less populated by African Americans than they were during the earlier, sometimes mid and late parts of the 20th century.
The San Francisco Bay Area is home to over a dozen thousand Eritreans in estimation, as with other Habesha peoples like Ethiopian Americans; Apple Valley Lane/Piner Road areas in Santa Rosa and Temescal Avenue in Oakland have plentiful populations.
Enclaves of Eritreans can be found in Seattle and Tacoma
Sinaloa, Mexico - this Mexican state has coastal Greek communities. The cities of Culiacan, Humaya, Tamazula and Yoreme have the largest Greek concentrations in Sinaloa where the cultivation of tomato brought them fortunes and the valley is known as "Valle de Grecia" or the "Greek Valley".[232]
Boston, Massachusetts (portions and many suburbs) – largest Irish city outside Ireland. Peak percentage nearing 50% in 1920 after 70 years of immigration.[248]
Little Italy in Erie, Pennsylvania has the largest Italian-American population in the city.[249] In Philadelphia, Italian immigrants initially settled in Bella Vista on the city's south side.[250]
Woodburn, Oregon – large Russian Old believer community as well as Russian Molokans, Doukhobors and recent refugees from the former Soviet Union: Ukrainian and Russian Pentecostals and Baptists.
Largest Arab-American and Middle eastern enclaves.
Chicago – A section of city nicknamed "Little Iraq", Chicago has the largest Iraqi community in the USA. Little Arabia in the city's Northwest side, for example, has many Arab-Americans.[295]Devon Avenue (Chicago) also has Arabs, Iranians and South Asians such as Pashtun Americans.
Detroit (i.e. Southwest side) – over 300,000 Arab-Americans in its Metro area, another 300,000 throughout Michigan, the city and state is the largest Arab-American community in the USA. Dearborn is their cultural center in the region. Also in nearby Dearborn Heights.[297]
New Mexico – there is a small but growing community of Afghan refugees in Albuquerque, Rio Rancho and Las Cruces. The majority are Pashtun but there are some Hazara and other ethnic groups. The community is religiously diverse with Sunni and Shia Muslims, Ismailis and irreligious.[305][306][307]
Little Kabul, Fremont, California - Largest concentration are in the "Little Kabul Neighborhood", but they are spread throughout Fremont as well.
Miami-Dade County, Florida (Miami metro area has the largest Cuban population in the US with an estimate of 1 million Cuban-American residents with a large presence of Haitians, Jamaicans, Colombians, Brazilians, Nicaraguans, Puerto Ricans and Dominicans throughout the county)[324]
New York City[325] Most Hispanics/Latinos of any US city, large Hispanic/Latino communities.
Providence, Rhode Island - The state itself has a large and growing Latino community. Large Presence of Dominican, Guatemalan, and Puerto Rican Community[326]
Except Puerto Ricans (fourth as a nationality, second in ancestry among Hispanics and Latinos), Salvadorans are the second largest Hispanic/Latino ethnicity in the US, close to Dominicans who are third. Large Salvadoran communities developed in the late 20th–early 21st century period as a result of civil war, economic conditions, political turmoil and gang violence in the country, the country El Salvador is among the smallest in size in the Western Hemisphere. The largest Salvadoran population is in Central parts of Los Angeles[331] and throughout California along with Central American groups like Guatemalans, Hondurans and Nicaraguans.[332] Recent census data shows that for the first time, there are more Salvadorans living on Long Island than Puerto Ricans, with Salvadorans now numbering nearly 100,000,[333] representing nearly a quarter of all Hispanics in the region, making them the largest Latino group in Long Island (New York State).
Note: Since immigrants from Mexico have been the largest group for a long time and have spread throughout the country perhaps more than any other nationality in recent times, Mexican-American enclaves are far more numerous than this list would suggest.
Lower East Side, Manhattan, New York City (historic) – NYC is world's largest Jewish community outside Israel (10–20% of Jewish faith or descent, or 1.1 million – 1.5 million observant Jews).[362]
The highest concentration of urban Indians in the United States is believed to be in Anchorage, Alaska where over 10 percent of the population identify themselves in the census as having some Native ancestry, with 7.3 percent identifying that as their only ancestry. In the mainland USA, Indian Alley in downtown Los Angeles, California, may be the most dense Native American population of any major city.[364]
The second highest concentration of urban Indians in the U.S. is Albuquerque, New Mexico where at least 5 percent of the population belong to recognized Native American tribes such as the Navajo, Apache and Pueblo (Keresan, Tiwa, Tewa, Towa, Zuni). Southeast Albuquerque has the largest Native American community in the city but Native communities can also be found on the Westside and Rio Rancho. Albuquerque also has a Cherokee diaspora community known as the Cherokee Southwest Township. A much larger percentage of the population possess some Native ancestry but identity as Hispanos, Mestizos or Genizaros. This population lives all over the Albuquerque metro area but is concentrated in the South Valley and Bernalillo.
Berger Coli, Waltraud; Lobban, Richard (1990). The Cape Verdeans in Rhode Island(PDF). Providence, Rhode Island: Published jointly by the Rhode Island Heritage Commission and the Rhode Island Publication [i.e. Publications] Society. ISBN0917012941. Retrieved February 19, 2020.
Ochoa, Cecile Caguingin (November 3, 2013). "Carson, California commemoration caps Fil-Am history month". Inquirer. Retrieved December 1, 2014. After all, it is reputed to be the fourth city in the US with the highest percentage of Filipinos–approximately 20,000 out of its total 92,000 residents.
Texeira, Erin (November 27, 2000). "Carson, a Model of Multiracial Politics, Hit by Discord". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved December 1, 2014. In recent decades, Filipino newcomers have arrived at a rapid rate, now making up about 20 percent of Carson's population and 24 percent of the teens at the high school, according to city estimates.
Capozzola, Christopher (2016). "Tracing Filipino Philadelphia in the Pedro Supelana Papers". The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography. 140 (3): 426. doi:10.5215/pennmaghistbio.140.3.0426. S2CID151321775.
Bounds, Jamie. "Vietnamese in Mississippi" (Archived August 8, 2014, at the Wayback Machine). Mississippi Department of Archives and History. Retrieved on August 3, 2014. "People of Vietnamese heritage live throughout Mississippi, but most live in the metropolitan areas. The three coastal counties of Jackson, Harrison, and Hancock are home to the state's largest Vietnamese population – Harrison County leads the way with more than half of the population."
"India leads all nations in sending people to Detroit" (Archive). Crain's Detroit Business. June 1, 2014. Updated June 6, 2014. Retrieved on September 29, 2014. "Macomb has the highest current concentration of Albanian immigrants locally at 4,800, according to Global Detroit's data. That's the fourth-largest nationality of any group in the county."
Susel, Rudolph (May 11, 2018). "SLOVENES". Encyclopedia of Cleveland History | Case Western Reserve University. Case Western Reserve University. Retrieved February 14, 2020.
Tyler (2016). "Occupational Mobility and Social Status: The Welsh Experience in Sharon, Pennsylvania, 1880–1930". Pennsylvania History: A Journal of Mid-Atlantic Studies. 83: 1. doi:10.5325/pennhistory.83.1.0001. S2CID146561321.