Browning Christopher R, Calder Catherine A, Krivo Lauren J, Smith Anna L, Boettner Bethany
Professor of sociology at The Ohio State University.
Professor of statistics at The Ohio State University.
RSF. 2017 Feb;3(2):210-231. doi: 10.7758/RSF.2017.3.2.09.
Residential segregation by income and education is increasing alongside slowly declining black-white segregation. Segregation in urban neighborhood residents' non-home activity spaces has not been explored. How integrated are the daily routines of people who live in the same neighborhood? Are people with different socioeconomic backgrounds that live near one another less likely to share routine activity locations than those of similar education or income? Do these patterns vary across the socioeconomic continuum or by neighborhood structure? The analyses draw on unique data from the Los Angeles Family and Neighborhood Survey that identify the location where residents engage in routine activities. Using multilevel p (network) models, we analyze pairs of households located in the same neighborhood and examine whether the dyad combinations across three levels of SES conduct routine activities in the same location, and whether neighbor socioeconomic similarity in the co-location of routine activities is dependent on the level of neighborhood socioeconomic inequality and trust. Results indicate that, on average, increasing SES diminishes the likelihood of sharing activity locations with any SES group. This pattern is most pronounced in neighborhoods characterized by high levels of socioeconomic inequality. Neighborhood trust explains a nontrivial proportion of the inequality effect on the extent of routine activity sorting by SES. Thus stark, visible neighborhood-level inequality by SES may lead to enhanced effects of distrust on the willingness to share routines across class.
收入和教育导致的居住隔离现象在增加,与此同时,黑人和白人之间的隔离在缓慢下降。城市社区居民非家庭活动空间的隔离情况尚未得到研究。住在同一社区的人们的日常生活融合程度如何?居住在彼此附近、社会经济背景不同的人,比起教育程度或收入相似的人,是否不太可能共享日常活动地点?这些模式在社会经济连续体中或因社区结构而有所不同吗?分析使用了来自洛杉矶家庭与社区调查的独特数据,这些数据确定了居民进行日常活动的地点。我们使用多层次p(网络)模型,分析位于同一社区的家庭对,研究社会经济地位三个层次的二元组合是否在同一地点进行日常活动,以及日常活动共址时邻居的社会经济相似性是否取决于社区社会经济不平等和信任的程度。结果表明,平均而言,社会经济地位的提高会降低与任何社会经济地位群体共享活动地点的可能性。这种模式在社会经济不平等程度高的社区最为明显。社区信任在社会经济地位对日常活动分类程度的不平等影响中占了相当大的比例。因此,社会经济地位造成的明显的社区层面不平等,可能会增强不信任对不同阶层间共享日常活动意愿的影响。