The makeup of American communities is changing – some communities are becoming more diverse, whilst others are becoming more segregated. In new research, William A.V. Clark, Eva Andersson, John Osth and Bo Malmberg examine trends in neighborhood diversity in Los Angeles since 2000. They find that only one third of people now live in strongly segregated neighborhoods, down from 40 percent in 2010, and that this increasing diversity has mainly been driven by the decline of homogenous white and black neighborhoods
Recognition is growing that criminogenic neighborhood effects may not end at the borders of local co...
Recognition is growing that criminogenic neighborhood effects may not end at the borders of local co...
How democratic nation-states deal with racial and nativity diversity is critical in understanding me...
Residential landscapes throughout the urban United States have long been associated with high levels...
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2016-06Due to wide-ranging demographic shifts over the ...
Analyzes changes in the racial composition of large metropolitan neighborhoods from 1990 to 2000, us...
Ethnoracial diversification is a necessary if insufficient step toward integration. It expands acces...
This is a draft manuscript that is currently under review. Please contact the authors for the most r...
Dear and others associated with the ‘Los Angeles School of Urbanism’ have presented a series of chal...
The initial releases of data from the 2000 U.S. Census allow exploration of the extent of change, if...
This is a draft manuscript. Please do not distribute or cite without contacting the author. Sociolog...
The residential segregation of four main ethnic groups over the period 1980-2000 is examined for fou...
The Chicago metropolitan region consists of a spatially complex mosaic of neighborhoods, in which me...
This analysis examines the spatial fragmentation of the urban landscape with respect to neighborhood...
A new study on the housing search process adds to a growing body of research questioning the myth th...
Recognition is growing that criminogenic neighborhood effects may not end at the borders of local co...
Recognition is growing that criminogenic neighborhood effects may not end at the borders of local co...
How democratic nation-states deal with racial and nativity diversity is critical in understanding me...
Residential landscapes throughout the urban United States have long been associated with high levels...
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2016-06Due to wide-ranging demographic shifts over the ...
Analyzes changes in the racial composition of large metropolitan neighborhoods from 1990 to 2000, us...
Ethnoracial diversification is a necessary if insufficient step toward integration. It expands acces...
This is a draft manuscript that is currently under review. Please contact the authors for the most r...
Dear and others associated with the ‘Los Angeles School of Urbanism’ have presented a series of chal...
The initial releases of data from the 2000 U.S. Census allow exploration of the extent of change, if...
This is a draft manuscript. Please do not distribute or cite without contacting the author. Sociolog...
The residential segregation of four main ethnic groups over the period 1980-2000 is examined for fou...
The Chicago metropolitan region consists of a spatially complex mosaic of neighborhoods, in which me...
This analysis examines the spatial fragmentation of the urban landscape with respect to neighborhood...
A new study on the housing search process adds to a growing body of research questioning the myth th...
Recognition is growing that criminogenic neighborhood effects may not end at the borders of local co...
Recognition is growing that criminogenic neighborhood effects may not end at the borders of local co...
How democratic nation-states deal with racial and nativity diversity is critical in understanding me...