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Total population and overall levels of poverty and affluence in the five metropolitan areas.

Total population and overall levels of poverty and affluence in the five metropolitan areas.

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The purpose of this study is to compare socioeconomic segregation patterns and levels in Brussels, Copenhagen, Amsterdam, Oslo, and Stockholm with uniform measurements. Previous research has been hampered by conceptual and methodological shortcomings. We use harmonized datasets containing geocoded indicators based on a nearest-neighbors approach. O...

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... the LQ is 1, it means that there is a match between the neighborhood's share of poor (affluent) and the total area's share of poor (affluent); values lower than 1 indicate that poor (affluent) residents are underrepresented in the neighborhoods; values higher than 1 indicate that poor (affluent) residents are over-represented in the neighborhoods relative to a perfectly even distribution in the metropolitan area. 5, Table 2 presents the total population in the five metropolitan areas delimited in the study and the overall shares of the population at risk of poverty and with high income. These overall shares may not be strictly comparable among cities due to the differences in income definitions mentioned above. ...

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... In addition, a study in Michigan demonstrated that segregation resulted in whites across income levels residing in better neighborhoods than blacks of similar economic standing (Darden et al., 2018). A study of Brussels, Copenhagen, Amsterdam, Oslo, and Stockholm revealed a positive correlation between high levels of ethnic/racial segregation and increased deprivation within those segregated areas (Haandrikman et al., 2023;Harsman, 2006). In South Africa, persistent occupational segregation is evident, with blacks disproportionately concentrated in low-paying jobs compared to Whites (Gradín, 2019). ...
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