Exposure of Neighborhood Racial and Socio-Economic Composition in Activity Space: A New Approach Adjusting for Residential Conditions

IF 3.3 1区 社会学 Q1 SOCIOLOGY Social Forces Pub Date : 2024-02-20 DOI:10.1093/sf/soae021
Liang Cai, Christopher R Browning, Kathleen A Cagney
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Abstract

A longstanding urban sociological literature emphasizes the geographic isolation of city dwellers in residence and everyday routines, expecting exposures to neighborhood racial and socio-economic structure driven principally by city-wide segregation and the role of proximity and homophily in mobility. The compelled mobility approach emphasizes the uneven distribution of organizational and institutional resources across urban space, expecting residents of poor Black-segregated neighborhoods to exhibit non-trivial levels of everyday exposure to White, non-poor areas for resource seeking. We use two sets of location data in the hypersegregated Chicago metro to examine these two approaches: Global Positioning System (GPS) location tracking on a sample of older adults from the Chicago Health and Activity Space in Real-Time (CHART) study and travel diaries on a sample of younger adults by the Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning (CMAP). We introduce a novel and flexible individual-level method for assessing activity space exposures that accounts for the spatially proximate environment around home. Analyses reveal that activity space contexts mimic the racial/ethnic and socio-economic landscape of respondents’ broad residential environment. However, after residential-based adjustment, Black younger (CMAP) adults from poor Black neighborhoods are disproportionately exposed to Whiter, less Black but less non-poor neighborhoods. Older (CHART) adult activity spaces align more closely with their residential areas; however, activity spaces of poor-Black-neighborhood-residing CHART Blacks are systematically poorer and, less consistently, more Black and less White after local area adjustment. Implications for understanding contextual exposures on well-being and the potential for age or cohort differences in isolation are discussed.
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邻里种族和社会经济构成在活动空间中的暴露:根据居住条件进行调整的新方法
长期以来,城市社会学文献强调城市居民在居住和日常活动中的地理隔离,认为居民区的种族和社会经济结构主要由城市范围内的隔离以及流动中的邻近性和同质性所驱动。强迫流动法强调组织和机构资源在城市空间中的不均衡分布,预计黑人隔离的贫困社区居民日常会接触到非贫困的白人地区,以寻求资源。我们使用两组芝加哥大都市超隔离区的定位数据来研究这两种方法:全球定位系统(GPS)对芝加哥健康和实时活动空间(CHART)研究中的老年人样本进行定位跟踪,芝加哥大都会规划局(CMAP)对年轻成年人样本进行旅行日记。我们引入了一种新颖、灵活的个人层面评估活动空间暴露的方法,该方法考虑了家庭周围的空间环境。分析表明,活动空间环境模拟了受访者广泛居住环境中的种族/民族和社会经济状况。然而,经过基于居住地的调整后,来自贫困黑人社区的年轻黑人(CMAP)成年人与白人、黑人较少但非贫困社区的接触不成比例。年龄较大(CHART)的成年人的活动空间与其居住区更为接近;然而,在对居住在贫困黑人社区的 CHART 黑人的活动空间进行地方区域调整后,他们的活动空间系统性地变得更差,而且黑人更多白人更少的情况也不太一致。本文讨论了了解环境暴露对幸福感的影响,以及年龄或队列差异对隔离的潜在影响。
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来源期刊
Social Forces
Social Forces SOCIOLOGY-
CiteScore
6.30
自引率
6.20%
发文量
123
期刊介绍: Established in 1922, Social Forces is recognized as a global leader among social research journals. Social Forces publishes articles of interest to a general social science audience and emphasizes cutting-edge sociological inquiry as well as explores realms the discipline shares with psychology, anthropology, political science, history, and economics. Social Forces is published by Oxford University Press in partnership with the Department of Sociology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
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