Introducing a spatially explicit Gini measure for spatial segregation

被引:0
|
作者
Umut Türk
John Östh
机构
[1] Abdullah Gül University,Department of Economics
[2] Oslo Metropolitan University,Faculty of Technology, Art and Design, Department of Civil Engineering and Energy Technology
来源
关键词
Segregation; Gini index; Sweden; Bespoke neighbourhoods; R10; R23; R52; D63;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
This paper proposes an alternative measure of economic segregation by income that utilizes the Gini index as the basis of measurement. The Gini Index of Spatial Segregation (GSS) is a ratio of two Gini indices that compares the inequality between neighbourhoods to the inequality between individuals at the macro-level where neighbourhoods are nested. Unlike earlier measures of segregation found in the literature, the GSS uses individualized neighbourhoods, which can be defined as an area constituted within a radius or as a population count method around an individual geo-location, depending on the population density and proximity among individuals in the study area. The GSS can measure residential segregation by any continuous variable for both radii and k-nearest neighbours (knn with and without a decay factor) approaches to bespoke neighbourhoods. Therefore, it is sensitive to the spatial configuration of the area, easy to compute and interpret, and suitable for comparative studies of segregation over time and across different contexts. An empirical application of the index is illustrated using data from Sweden that covers the entire population for 1994, 2004, and 2014. We demonstrate how the definition and scale of the neighbourhood influence the measures of economic segregation. Overall, the GSS offers a flexible and robust framework for measuring segregation that can be used to inform policy decisions and research on inequality.
引用
收藏
页码:469 / 488
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Introducing a spatially explicit Gini measure for spatial segregation
    Turk, Umut
    Osth, John
    [J]. JOURNAL OF GEOGRAPHICAL SYSTEMS, 2023, 25 (04) : 469 - 488
  • [2] A spatially explicit measure of beta diversity
    Bacaro, G.
    Ricotta, C.
    [J]. COMMUNITY ECOLOGY, 2007, 8 (01) : 41 - 46
  • [3] A spatially explicit measure of beta diversity
    G. Bacaro
    C. Ricotta
    [J]. Community Ecology, 2007, 8 : 41 - 46
  • [4] Formulating a general spatial segregation measure
    Wong, DW
    [J]. PROFESSIONAL GEOGRAPHER, 2005, 57 (02): : 285 - 294
  • [5] On the spatially explicit Gini coefficient: the case study of Chile—a high-income developing country
    Ricardo Crespo
    Ignacio Hernandez
    [J]. Letters in Spatial and Resource Sciences, 2020, 13 : 37 - 47
  • [6] Introducing a new method for assessing spatially explicit processes of landscape fragmentation
    Li, Shujuan
    Yang, Bo
    [J]. ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS, 2015, 56 : 116 - 124
  • [7] No man is an Island: A spatially explicit approach to measure development resilience
    Scognamillo, Antonio
    Song, Chun
    Ignaciuk, Adriana
    [J]. WORLD DEVELOPMENT, 2023, 171
  • [8] Spatially explicit ecological models: a spatial convolution approach
    Allen, JC
    Brewster, CC
    Slone, DH
    [J]. CHAOS SOLITONS & FRACTALS, 2001, 12 (02) : 333 - 347
  • [9] A spatially explicit evolutionary algorithm for the spatial partitioning problem
    Liu, Yan Y.
    Cho, Wendy K. Tam
    [J]. APPLIED SOFT COMPUTING, 2020, 90
  • [10] Aggregating spatially explicit criteria: avoiding spatial compensation
    Nijssen, David
    Schumann, Andreas H.
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RIVER BASIN MANAGEMENT, 2014, 12 (01) : 87 - 98