Sökning: "residential segregation"
Visar resultat 11 - 15 av 42 avhandlingar innehållade orden residential segregation.
11. Essays on Ethnic Segregation and Economic Outcomes
Sammanfattning : Essay 1: This paper studies tipping behaviour in the residential mobility of the native population inSweden between 1990 and 2007. Using regression discontinuity methods, we find that thegrowth in native population in a neighbourhood discontinuously drops once aneighbourhood’s immigrant share exceeds the identified tipping point. LÄS MER
12. Housing tenure and residential mobility in Stockholm 1990-2014
Sammanfattning : In this thesis the links between housing tenure, income and selective, segregation generating, residential mobility are explored. The development of these links is analysed against the background of housing regime changes in Stockholm between 1990 and 2014. LÄS MER
13. Free to Choose? : Studies of Opportunity Constraints and the Dynamics of School Segregation
Sammanfattning : As a result of the negative consequences and persistence of school segregation, its causes have received a great deal of scholarly attention across a range of disciplines. However, the existing research has tended to overlook those aspects of the segregation process that lie beyond the choice of the individual. LÄS MER
14. En stad i världsklass – hur och för vem? : En studie om Stockholms sociala stadsplanering
Sammanfattning : The city is characterised by unequal living conditions and inequities. Residential segregation – in the sense that people with different socio-economic resources and of various ethnicities live separately from one another – is a major cause of urban inequities. LÄS MER
15. Local Social Exposure and Inter-Neighborhood Mobility
Sammanfattning : Studies on ethnic residential segregation analyze how the inter-neighborhood mobility of individuals shapes their spatial distribution across cities. This literature has shown that the residential choices of households partly depend on the ethnic composition of their neighborhoods: higher in-group shares promote the presence of more in-group members, and vice versa. LÄS MER