Life in Poverty Neighbourhoods

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behavioural impacts urban areas
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Category=JBS
composition
effect
effects
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Family Life Cycle Stage
Household Socio-economic Status
housing policy analysis
Housing Tenure Choice
Housing Wealth
instrumental
Instrumental Variables
kempen
Lo Ca
moving
MTO
MTO Demonstration
Multiple Correspondence Analysis
neighbourhood effects
Neighbourhood Impacts
Neighbourhood Poverty Rates
Neighbourhood Processes
Neighbourhood Social Process
Non-housing Wealth
opportunity
Randomly Assigned
Scottish Social Attitudes Survey
Selection Bias Problem
Single Person Households
social mobility research
Social Rental Dwellings
socioeconomic disadvantage studies
spatial segregation
Tenure Choice
total
Total Network Size
UK Housing Policy
Urban Restructuring
urban sociology
van
variables
Weak Economic Position
WIM

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415568357
  • Weight: 280g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 13 Oct 2009
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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In contemporary European and American urban policy and politics and in academic research it is typically assumed that spatial concentrations of poor households and/or ethnic minority households will have negative effects upon the opportunities to improve the social conditions of those who are living in these concentrations. Since the level of concentration tends to be correlated with the level of spatial segregation the 'debate on segregation' is also linked to the social opportunity discussion. This book explores the central questions in urban and housing studies:

  • Do poor neighbourhoods make their residents poorer?
  • Does the neighbourhood structure exert an effect on the residents (behavioural, attitudinal, or psychological) even when controlling for individual characteristics of the residents?

This issue has offered a locus for multi-disciplinary investigations on both sides of the Atlantic, and this volume demonstrates the rich geographical, sociological, economic and psychological dimensions of this issue.

This book was previously published as a special issue of the journal Housing Studies.

Jürgen Friedrichs is Professor of Sociology in the Research Institute for Sociology, University of Cologne, Germany. George Galster is Clarence Hilberry Professor of Urban Affairs, College of Urban, Labor and Metropolitan Affairs, Wayne State University, Detroit, USA. Sako Musterd is Professor of Urban Geography in the Department of Geography and Planning of the University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands.