Paths of Neighborhood Change: Race and Crime in Urban America.Richard P. Taub , D. Garth Taylor , Jan D. Dunham

1986 ◽  
Vol 92 (2) ◽  
pp. 468-470
Author(s):  
Avery M. Guest
1985 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 478
Author(s):  
Anthony H. Pascal ◽  
Richard B. Taub ◽  
D. Garth Taylor ◽  
Jan D. Dunham

1985 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 189-200 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. C. J. Everaers ◽  
M. W. A. Maas

Author(s):  
Karen Chapple ◽  
Ate Poorthuis ◽  
Matthew Zook ◽  
Eva Phillips

The new availability of big data sources provides an opportunity to revisit our ability to predict neighborhood change. This article explores how data on urban activity patterns, specifically, geotagged tweets, improve the understanding of one type of neighborhood change—gentrification—by identifying dynamic connections between neighborhoods and across scales. We first develop a typology of neighborhood change and risk of gentrification from 1990 to 2015 for the San Francisco Bay Area based on conventional demographic data from the Census. Then, we use multivariate regression to analyze geotagged tweets from 2012 to 2015, finding that outsiders are significantly more likely to visit neighborhoods currently undergoing gentrification. Using the factors that best predict gentrification, we identify a subset of neighborhoods that Twitter-based activity suggests are at risk for gentrification over the short term—but are not identified by analysis with traditional census data. The findings suggest that combining Census and social media data can provide new insights on gentrification such as augmenting our ability to identify that processes of change are underway. This blended approach, using Census and big data, can help policymakers implement and target policies that preserve housing affordability and protext tenants more effectively.


2021 ◽  
pp. 107808742110169
Author(s):  
Sharon Cornelissen

Drawing on three years of fieldwork, this article explains the emergence and persistence of two conflicting styles of street life in Brightmoor, a depopulated, majority Black, poor Detroit neighborhood facing early gentrification. As most longtimers were inured to historical neighborhood violence, they tended to act vigilantly in public, even after recent crime declines. By contrast, White newcomers, most of whom had moved from middle-class neighborhoods, often defied vigilance such as by organizing a farmers' market across from an open-air drug market. They mobilized aspirational public life as a means for changing the neighborhood and end in itself. To explain these conflicting styles, this article theorizes the cultural mechanism of “ the hysteresis of street life.” Styles of street life, shaped by residents' unequal historical neighborhood experiences, tend to linger under conditions of gradual neighborhood change. It also shows how the hysteresis of street life may contribute to the reproduction of inequalities.


1987 ◽  
Vol 28 ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
William Grigsby ◽  
Morton Baratz ◽  
George Galster ◽  
Duncan Maclennan
Keyword(s):  

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