Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2019This paper explores the residential patterns of the six largest Asian ethnic groups – Chinese, Asian Indian, Filipino, Vietnamese, Korean, and Japanese – across fifty-seven U.S. metropolitan areas, which are categorized into seven types of immigrant gateways. Using 2010 U.S. decennial census data, I discover that the application of multiple residential segregation measures, each of which captures a unique aspect of residential experiences, leads to diverging results across subgroups and across places. On the basis of the dissimilarity index, Vietnamese are the most segregated; Chinese and Asian Indians are the most segregated when using the isolation index; and Filipinos are the most segregat...
We investigate the residential assimilation of Asian-origin groups in the U.S., paying particular at...
At the national level, the Asian American population has grown more than any other major race group....
Spatial consideration has been neglected in the migration literature. This paper fills the gap by ev...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2022Today, Asians are the fastest growing ethnoracial grou...
The present study examines the spatial assimilation patterns of immigrants who arrived as children. ...
The premise of this paper is that immigrant homeownership patterns in global metropolitan housing ma...
Since 1965, the United States has seen large scale immigration from Asian countries previously under...
This paper explores three methods of reporting residential patterns: (1) concentration profiles, (2)...
research-article2015 Immigrant-origin populations, once overwhelmingly concentrated in a handful of ...
Journal ArticleThis paper uses census microdata to examine five aspects of residential assimilation ...
The Chinese American is a major part of the fast growing Asian population in the City of New York. T...
Several factors affecting household formations of first- and second-generation. Asian and Hispanic/L...
© 2016 American Real Estate and Urban Economics Association Several factors affecting household form...
We introduce a new statistical definition of an immigrant ethnic neighborhood based on a choice mode...
This research undertakes an analysis of Chinese and Japanese American suburbanization in an effort t...
We investigate the residential assimilation of Asian-origin groups in the U.S., paying particular at...
At the national level, the Asian American population has grown more than any other major race group....
Spatial consideration has been neglected in the migration literature. This paper fills the gap by ev...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2022Today, Asians are the fastest growing ethnoracial grou...
The present study examines the spatial assimilation patterns of immigrants who arrived as children. ...
The premise of this paper is that immigrant homeownership patterns in global metropolitan housing ma...
Since 1965, the United States has seen large scale immigration from Asian countries previously under...
This paper explores three methods of reporting residential patterns: (1) concentration profiles, (2)...
research-article2015 Immigrant-origin populations, once overwhelmingly concentrated in a handful of ...
Journal ArticleThis paper uses census microdata to examine five aspects of residential assimilation ...
The Chinese American is a major part of the fast growing Asian population in the City of New York. T...
Several factors affecting household formations of first- and second-generation. Asian and Hispanic/L...
© 2016 American Real Estate and Urban Economics Association Several factors affecting household form...
We introduce a new statistical definition of an immigrant ethnic neighborhood based on a choice mode...
This research undertakes an analysis of Chinese and Japanese American suburbanization in an effort t...
We investigate the residential assimilation of Asian-origin groups in the U.S., paying particular at...
At the national level, the Asian American population has grown more than any other major race group....
Spatial consideration has been neglected in the migration literature. This paper fills the gap by ev...