Catney Gemma, Ellis Mark, Wright Richard
Geography, School of Natural and Built Environment, Queen's University Belfast, Belfast, UK.
Department of Geography and Center for Studies in Demography and Ecology, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA.
Popul Space Place. 2024 May;30(4). doi: 10.1002/psp.2745. Epub 2023 Dec 14.
Conventional explanations of neighbourhood ethnic transitions consider what drives differential growth in ethnic group populations without regard to household composition. We enrich these nonhousehold approaches by using consistent Census data on neighbourhoods and households for England and Wales for 2001, 2011 and 2021 to analyse connections between mixed-ethnicity households and neighbourhood ethnic diversity. We employ a neighbourhood typology of ethnic diversity that identifies neighbourhoods as either low- or moderate-diversity, or high-diversity, where no single ethnic group is in the majority. We focus particularly on White-majority and highly diverse neighbourhoods given the dominance of the former in residential spaces in England and Wales, and because they are the principal source of transitions to highly diverse neighbourhoods. Mixed-ethnicity households have become an increasingly important feature of the ethnic diversification of England and Wales; by 2021, almost 15% of multiperson households were mixed, a growth from 12% in 2011 and 9% in 2001. We find that higher levels of neighbourhood ethnic diversity are associated with higher shares of mixed-ethnicity households. In high-diversity neighbourhoods, for example, around 30% of multiperson households (nearly a quarter of a million households) were ethnically mixed in 2021. Levels of household mixing in moderate-diversity White neighbourhoods were considerably higher than in low-diversity White neighbourhoods. The same is found for diversifying neighbourhoods. Neighbourhoods that become more ethnically diverse were typically home to higher rates of mixed-ethnicity households. Stably moderately diverse White neighbourhoods also had a higher proportion of mixed households. Studies of neighbourhood transition that focus on individuals in neighbourhoods may be missing important processes operating in the intimate spaces of the home. Including this intermediate scale of analysis adds to our understanding of neighbourhood ethnic mixing and processes of integration.
对邻里种族转变的传统解释关注的是推动不同种族群体人口差异增长的因素,而没有考虑家庭构成。我们利用2001年、2011年和2021年英格兰和威尔士关于邻里和家庭的一致人口普查数据,丰富了这些非家庭层面的研究方法,以分析混合种族家庭与邻里种族多样性之间的联系。我们采用了一种种族多样性的邻里类型划分方法,将邻里划分为低多样性或中等多样性,或高多样性,即没有单一种族群体占多数的邻里。鉴于前者在英格兰和威尔士居住空间中的主导地位,以及它们是向高度多样化邻里转变的主要来源,我们特别关注白人占多数的邻里和高度多样化的邻里。混合种族家庭已成为英格兰和威尔士种族多样化中日益重要的特征;到2021年,近15%的多人家庭是混合家庭,高于2011年的12%和2001年的9%。我们发现,邻里种族多样性水平越高,混合种族家庭的比例就越高。例如,在高多样性邻里中,2021年约30%的多人家庭(近25万户家庭)是种族混合的。中等多样性白人邻里中的家庭混合程度明显高于低多样性白人邻里。在多样化的邻里中也发现了同样的情况。种族变得更加多样化的邻里通常有更高比例的混合种族家庭。稳定的中等多样性白人邻里中混合家庭的比例也更高。关注邻里中个体的邻里转变研究可能忽略了在家庭私密空间中发生的重要过程。纳入这种中间尺度的分析有助于我们理解邻里种族混合和融合过程。