Search results for "Spatial inequality"

showing 5 items of 5 documents

Mapping child maltreatment risk: a 12-year spatio-temporal analysis of neighborhood influences.

2017

Abstract Background ‘Place’ matters in understanding prevalence variations and inequalities in child maltreatment risk. However, most studies examining ecological variations in child maltreatment risk fail to take into account the implications of the spatial and temporal dimensions of neighborhoods. In this study, we conduct a high-resolution small-area study to analyze the influence of neighborhood characteristics on the spatio-temporal epidemiology of child maltreatment risk. Methods We conducted a 12-year (2004–2015) small-area Bayesian spatio-temporal epidemiological study with all families with child maltreatment protection measures in the city of Valencia, Spain. As neighborhood units…

Area-specific risk estimationTime FactorsGeneral Computer ScienceHealth geographyPoison controlNeighborhood influenceslcsh:Computer applications to medicine. Medical informaticsSuicide preventionOccupational safety and health03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineSpatio-Temporal AnalysisResidence CharacteristicsRisk FactorsEnvironmental healthInjury preventionHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciences030212 general & internal medicineChild AbuseChildSocioeconomic statusChild maltreatmentResearch05 social sciencesPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthAbsolute risk reductionHuman factors and ergonomicsSmall-area studyGeneral Business Management and AccountingSocial ClassSocioeconomic FactorsSpainlcsh:R858-859.7Disease mappingSpatial inequalityBayesian spatio-temporal modelingPsychology050104 developmental & child psychologyInternational journal of health geographics
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Social Geographical Patterns in Membership of the Established Church in Denmark

2019

The Church of Denmark was established in 1849 and is regarded as a pillar of traditional national identity. This status is being challenged by a steady decline in membership in recent decades. The Capital area is especially prone to low membership rates, and this regional pattern remains when the analysis controls for income and education. Furthermore, the local membership rate is also related to affiliation to the neighbourhood. Our detailed analysis is based on public register data on the individual level combined with geographical mapping information. Denmark is thereby divided into micro-aggregated areas in order to locate varying church membership rates. While some local variation can …

Geography of religionSpatial inequalitySecularizationReligious studiesSpatial inequalitySociologyEconomic geographyChurch membership ratesSecularization
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Understanding trends and drivers of urban poverty in American cities

2022

Urban poverty arises from the uneven distribution of poor populations across neighborhoods of a city. We study the trend and drivers of urban poverty across American cities over the last 40 years. To do so, we resort to a family of urban poverty indices that account for features of incidence, distribution, and segregation of poverty across census tracts. Compared to the universally-adopted concentrated poverty index, these measures have a solid normative background. We use tract-level data to assess the extent to which demographics, housing, education, employment, and income distribution affect levels and changes in urban poverty. A decomposition study allows to single out the effect of cha…

American Community SurveyStatistics and ProbabilityCensusEconomics and EconometricsMathematics (miscellaneous)Oaxaca–Blinder decompositionCensuGini indexSpatial inequalityConcentrated povertySocial Sciences (miscellaneous)Empirical Economics
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Entrepreneurship and space. A decomposition analysis on Italian data

2011

Entrepreneurship Spatial inequality Decomposition indexSettore SECS-S/03 - Statistica Economica
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Commodity Tax Competition and Industry Location Under the Destination- and the Origin-Principle

2007

We develop a model of commodity tax competition with monopolistically competitive internationally mobile firms, transport costs, and asymmetric country sizes. We investigate the impacts of non-cooperative tax setting, as well as of tax harmonization and changes in the tax principle, in both the short and the long run. The origin principle, when compared to the destination principle, is shown to exacerbate tax competition and to erode tax revenues, yet leads to a more equal spatial distribution of economic activity. This suggests that federations which care about spatial inequality, like the European Union, face a non-trivial choice for their tax principle that goes beyond the standard consi…

Destination principleTax revenueSpatial inequalityTax harmonizationTax competitionCommodityEconomicsmedia_common.cataloged_instanceRedistribution (cultural anthropology)International economicsEuropean unionmedia_commonSSRN Electronic Journal
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