Airport Noise in Atlanta: The Inequality of Sound

Jeffrey P. Cohen, Cletus C. Coughlin, Jonas C. Crews
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

We examine how changes in the geographic concentrations of Hispanic and African-American populations are correlated with changes in probabilities of airport noise, in Atlanta, during 2003 and 2012. We estimate ordered probit and locally weighted ordered probit regressions for three different noise categories to determine the correlations between these two demographic groups and the aircraft noise levels experienced by people in individual houses that sold. Then we determine the average coefficient for all houses sold in each Census block group, and we plot each year’s coefficients for each block group against the percentiles of the minority population. While the absolute level of noise has declined over the geographic area considered in 2012 compared with 2003, we find that the distribution of noise coefficients among Hispanics and blacks became more inequitable in 2012 compared with 2003. At least two potential mechanisms could generate these correlations. Due to residential mobility, income and preferences could combine to produce a concentration of minorities in certain neighborhoods. Or, perhaps noisier flight paths are imposed upon higher minority neighborhoods as a result of discrimination. Our findings contribute to the broader literature on environmental justice, even though we cannot definitively infer the mechanisms at work.
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亚特兰大机场噪音:声音的不平等
我们研究了2003年和2012年期间,亚特兰大西班牙裔和非洲裔人口地理集中的变化与机场噪音概率的变化之间的关系。我们估计了三种不同噪音类别的有序probit和局部加权有序probit回归,以确定这两种人口统计群体与售出房屋中人们所经历的飞机噪音水平之间的相关性。然后,我们确定每个人口普查街区组中所有售出房屋的平均系数,并将每个街区组每年的系数与少数民族人口的百分位数进行对比。虽然与2003年相比,2012年所考虑的地理区域的绝对噪音水平有所下降,但我们发现,与2003年相比,2012年西班牙裔和黑人之间的噪音系数分布变得更加不公平。至少有两种潜在的机制可以产生这些相关性。由于居民的流动性、收入和偏好可能共同导致少数民族集中在某些社区。或者,由于歧视,更嘈杂的飞行路线被强加给了更高的少数族裔社区。我们的发现有助于更广泛的关于环境正义的文献,即使我们不能明确地推断出工作机制。
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