This paper conceptualizes welfare neighborhoods–places where welfare payments have deeply insinuated themselves into the local economy and survival strategies of the poor. Moving beyond Wilson’s concept of concentrated poverty, I recognize the diversity and heterogeneity of impoverished neighborhoods, as well as more fully develop the relationship between welfare and place. I propose three welfare neighborhood types–the jobless ghetto, immigrant enclave and service-dependent ghetto–which are then explored using 2000 census data and a k-means cluster analysis. I identify and map the three sets of welfare neighborhoods in the two most populous urban jurisdictions in the United States, New York City and Los Angeles County. In the conclusion, I...
Given the recent rise of poverty in U.S. suburbs, this study asks: What poor neighborhoods are most ...
Despite the recent upsurge in neighborhood effects research, few studies have examined the impact of...
Research on the progress of welfare reform commonly relies on multi-year state and national evaluati...
This article will analyze the role of the neighborhood in making welfare reform possible. It will co...
The increased visibility of concentrated urban poverty has posed a variety of intellectual and polic...
Urban scientists, policy makers and public administrators have long been aware of the issue of conce...
Despite the recent upsurge in neighborhood effects research, few studies have examined the impact of...
This paper provided investigation on economic welfare changes in poor neighborhoods in U.S. central ...
Income segregation is not merely a physical separation between income groups, but is a core driving ...
Recent years have witnessed increased interest in the geographies of poverty and welfare. This artic...
Some studies suggest that, among other obstacles to employment, welfare participants face a spatial ...
This paper uses unique data on Philadelphia’s nonprofit organizations compiled from IRS listings, ci...
In the past thirty years, the American public has developed a stereotype of poor urban neighborhoods...
Contemporary approaches to concentrated poverty assume intractable ghettos and a dying urban core. I...
This article describes the types of economic isolation that are embedded in various theories of neig...
Given the recent rise of poverty in U.S. suburbs, this study asks: What poor neighborhoods are most ...
Despite the recent upsurge in neighborhood effects research, few studies have examined the impact of...
Research on the progress of welfare reform commonly relies on multi-year state and national evaluati...
This article will analyze the role of the neighborhood in making welfare reform possible. It will co...
The increased visibility of concentrated urban poverty has posed a variety of intellectual and polic...
Urban scientists, policy makers and public administrators have long been aware of the issue of conce...
Despite the recent upsurge in neighborhood effects research, few studies have examined the impact of...
This paper provided investigation on economic welfare changes in poor neighborhoods in U.S. central ...
Income segregation is not merely a physical separation between income groups, but is a core driving ...
Recent years have witnessed increased interest in the geographies of poverty and welfare. This artic...
Some studies suggest that, among other obstacles to employment, welfare participants face a spatial ...
This paper uses unique data on Philadelphia’s nonprofit organizations compiled from IRS listings, ci...
In the past thirty years, the American public has developed a stereotype of poor urban neighborhoods...
Contemporary approaches to concentrated poverty assume intractable ghettos and a dying urban core. I...
This article describes the types of economic isolation that are embedded in various theories of neig...
Given the recent rise of poverty in U.S. suburbs, this study asks: What poor neighborhoods are most ...
Despite the recent upsurge in neighborhood effects research, few studies have examined the impact of...
Research on the progress of welfare reform commonly relies on multi-year state and national evaluati...