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Are we breaking bubbles as we move? Exploring the relationship between urban mobility and segregation

Author

Listed:
  • Park, Souneil
  • Oshan, Taylor M.
  • Finamore, Alessandro
  • Ali, Abdallah El
Abstract
Segregation often dismantles common activity spaces and isolates people of different backgrounds, leading to irreconcilable inequalities that disfavour the poor and minorities and intensifies societal fragmentation. Therefore, segregation has become an increasing concern and topic of research with studies typically concentrating on the residential communities of a particular racial or socioeconomic group. In contrast, this paper provides a comprehensive view of segregation in the context of how it interacts with urban mobility. Specifically, it expands upon prior research by employing large-scale, seamless telecommunication logs of London, UK to provide a holistic view of mobility across the entire socioeconomic spectrum. A method is developed to transform the data to flows between geographic areas with different socioeconomic statuses. Spatial interaction models are then calibrated to examine the impact of both geographical distance and socioeconomic distance on the deterrence of flows and the analysis is extended to analyze the interaction of the two factors. Overall, socioeconomic distance is found to have a marginal effect compared to geographical distance. However, different effects are observed depending on the socioeconomic distance between flows and the deterrence of mobility tends to be the greatest when both physical and socioeconomic distance are high, suggesting that both factors may play a role creating and maintaining segregation.

Suggested Citation

  • Park, Souneil & Oshan, Taylor M. & Finamore, Alessandro & Ali, Abdallah El, 2020. "Are we breaking bubbles as we move? Exploring the relationship between urban mobility and segregation," OSF Preprints 2ubzn, Center for Open Science.
  • Handle: RePEc:osf:osfxxx:2ubzn
    DOI: 10.31219/osf.io/2ubzn
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    3. Raj Chetty & Nathaniel Hendren & Lawrence F. Katz, 2016. "The Effects of Exposure to Better Neighborhoods on Children: New Evidence from the Moving to Opportunity Experiment," American Economic Review, American Economic Association, vol. 106(4), pages 855-902, April.
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    6. Taylor M Oshan, 2016. "A primer for working with the Spatial Interaction modeling (SpInt) module in the python spatial analysis library (PySAL)," REGION, European Regional Science Association, vol. 3, pages 11-23.
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