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Residents of Racially Diverse Neighborhoods are More Likely to Help Others [psmag.com]

 

What do you look for in a community? How about helpful, giving residents—people who are eager to lend a hand?

Recently published research suggests you're more likely to find them in racially diverse neighborhoods.

A research team led by Krishna Savani and Jared Nai of Singapore Management University reports people who live in such areas are more inclined to voluntarily help others. This reflects the fact they are more likely to identify with all of humanity, and therefore "see the world as a family."

And you never turn your back on your family, right?

[For more on this story by TOM JACOBS, go to https://psmag.com/social-justi...ikely-to-help-others]

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I had some very positive experiences in the Southeast Bronx, when I visited my [then] girlfiend who lived there. I was initially surprised to learn that Pediatricians and Internal Medicine resident physicians [from Lincoln Hospital] made "House Calls" in that neighborhood--in spite of the 100,000 Heroin Addicts who resided in an area where 85 % of the Housing was 'sub-standard or deteriorated', and was served by a Police Precinct Station known as "Fort Apache", yet where some 'neighbors' and shop-keepers knew me by name, and 'helped' me, as did I them.

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