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热风险相关土地覆盖的种族/民族分布与居住隔离的关系。

The racial/ethnic distribution of heat risk-related land cover in relation to residential segregation.

机构信息

Department of Environmental Science, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, California 94720 , USA.

出版信息

Environ Health Perspect. 2013 Jul;121(7):811-7. doi: 10.1289/ehp.1205919. Epub 2013 May 14.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

We examined the distribution of heat risk-related land cover (HRRLC) characteristics across racial/ethnic groups and degrees of residential segregation.

METHODS

Block group-level tree canopy and impervious surface estimates were derived from the 2001 National Land Cover Dataset for densely populated urban areas of the United States and Puerto Rico, and linked to demographic characteristics from the 2000 Census. Racial/ethnic groups in a given block group were considered to live in HRRLC if at least half their population experienced the absence of tree canopy and at least half of the ground was covered by impervious surface (roofs, driveways, sidewalks, roads). Residential segregation was characterized for metropolitan areas in the United States and Puerto Rico using the multigroup dissimilarity index.

RESULTS

After adjustment for ecoregion and precipitation, holding segregation level constant, non-Hispanic blacks were 52% more likely (95% CI: 37%, 69%), non-Hispanic Asians 32% more likely (95% CI: 18%, 47%), and Hispanics 21% more likely (95% CI: 8%, 35%) to live in HRRLC conditions compared with non-Hispanic whites. Within each racial/ethnic group, HRRLC conditions increased with increasing degrees of metropolitan area-level segregation. Further adjustment for home ownership and poverty did not substantially alter these results, but adjustment for population density and metropolitan area population attenuated the segregation effects, suggesting a mediating or confounding role.

CONCLUSIONS

Land cover was associated with segregation within each racial/ethnic group, which may be explained partly by the concentration of racial/ethnic minorities into densely populated neighborhoods within larger, more segregated cities. In anticipation of greater frequency and duration of extreme heat events, climate change adaptation strategies, such as planting trees in urban areas, should explicitly incorporate an environmental justice framework that addresses racial/ethnic disparities in HRRLC.

摘要

目的

本研究旨在调查与热风险相关的土地覆盖(HRRLC)特征在不同种族/族裔群体和居住隔离程度中的分布情况。

方法

从美国和波多黎各人口密集的城市地区的 2001 年国家土地覆盖数据集提取街区层面的树冠和不透水面估算值,并将其与 2000 年人口普查的人口特征相关联。如果一个街区组中至少一半的人口没有树冠,并且至少一半的地面被不透水面(屋顶、车道、人行道、道路)覆盖,则该街区组中的种族/族裔群体被认为生活在 HRRLC 中。使用多组不相似指数来描述美国和波多黎各的大都市地区的居住隔离程度。

结果

在调整生态区和降水因素,并保持隔离程度不变的情况下,与非西班牙裔白人相比,非西班牙裔黑人(95%CI:37%,69%)、非西班牙裔亚洲人(95%CI:18%,47%)和西班牙裔人(95%CI:8%,35%)更有可能生活在 HRRLC 条件下。在每个种族/族裔群体内,HRRLC 条件随着大都市地区隔离程度的增加而增加。进一步调整住房拥有率和贫困状况并没有实质性地改变这些结果,但对人口密度和大都市地区人口的调整减弱了隔离效应,表明存在中介或混杂作用。

结论

土地覆盖与每个种族/族裔群体内的隔离有关,这可能部分可以解释为少数族裔集中在更大、更隔离的城市中人口密集的社区。由于预计极端高温事件的频率和持续时间将会增加,因此气候变化适应策略,如在城市地区种植树木,应明确纳入环境正义框架,以解决 HRRLC 中的种族/族裔差异。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/e45c/3701995/23742300801d/ehp.1205919.g001.jpg

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