Author:
Tammaru Tiit,Sinitsyna Anastasia,Akhavizadegan Alireza,van Ham Maarten,Marcińczak Szymon,Musterd Sako
Abstract
AbstractBasedonextensiveresearchwithdistinguished scholars within the book project ‘Socioeconomic Segregation in European Capital Cities’, this chapter summarizes the key trends in income inequalityand socioeconomic segregationin Europe. We draw our data from the two last census rounds, and we focus on the most common indicators of incomeinequality(Gini Index) and residential segregation(DissimilarityIndex). We find that levels of residential segregation grew between the two last censuses in most of the cities included in our study. Changes in residential segregation follow changes in income inequality with a time lag, and it tends to happen in both directions. Low levels of income inequality relate to low levels of segregation after 10 years, and high levels of inequality relate to high levels of segregation after 10 years.
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Reference54 articles.
1. Andersson R, Bråmå Å (2018) The Stockholm estates—a tale of the importance of initial conditions, macroeconomic dependencies, tenure and immigration: Springer, Cham
2. Andersson R, Kährik A (2016) Widening gaps: Segregation dynamics during two decades of economic and institutional change in Stockholm. In: Tammaru T, van Ham M, Marcińczak S, Musterd S (eds) Socio-economic segregation in European capital cities: East meets West: London. Routledge, New York, pp 110–131
3. Arundel R (2017) Equity inequity: Housing wealth inequality, inter and intra-generational divergences, and the rise of private landlordism. Housing, Theory and Society 34(2):176–200
4. Autor DH, Levy F, Murnane RJ (2001) The skill content of recent technological change: An empirical exploration: Citeseer
5. Bailey N, van Gent WP, Musterd S (2017) Remaking urban segregation: processes of income sorting and neighbourhood change. Population, Space and Place 23(3):e2013
Cited by
12 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献