William H. Frey's research while affiliated with University of Michigan and other places
What is this page?
This page lists the scientific contributions of an author, who either does not have a ResearchGate profile, or has not yet added these contributions to their profile.
It was automatically created by ResearchGate to create a record of this author's body of work. We create such pages to advance our goal of creating and maintaining the most comprehensive scientific repository possible. In doing so, we process publicly available (personal) data relating to the author as a member of the scientific community.
If you're a ResearchGate member, you can follow this page to keep up with this author's work.
If you are this author, and you don't want us to display this page anymore, please let us know.
It was automatically created by ResearchGate to create a record of this author's body of work. We create such pages to advance our goal of creating and maintaining the most comprehensive scientific repository possible. In doing so, we process publicly available (personal) data relating to the author as a member of the scientific community.
If you're a ResearchGate member, you can follow this page to keep up with this author's work.
If you are this author, and you don't want us to display this page anymore, please let us know.
Publications (2)
This study examines the changing profile of the urban United States, with particular reference to the impact of immigration, suburbanization, and growing diversity associated with increased racial and income polarization. "This overview provides a backdrop by focusing on the forces that shape key demographic trends across broad regions and in metro...
Citations
... Third, this study points to the inability of what is commonly defined as "suburban" to capture the heterogeneous local responses with immigrant suburbanization. Much prior work has relied on the urban/suburban dichotomy as one of the most important geographic classifications in the analysis of immigrant settlements (Frey & Fielding, 1996;Walker & Leitner, 2011), and operationalize the suburbs as a single and undifferentiated entity. While not diminishing the appropriate focus given to urban-suburban differences, our results urge scholars to give precedence to the heterogeneous processes of residential integration occurring concurrently within the suburbs. ...
... Environmental Emission resulted from auto dependency Anderson et al. (1996) Increased fuel and energy use Newman and Kentworthy (1988); U.S. EPA (2001) Faster consumption of land resources Dwyer and Childs (2004); Landis (1995); Kahn (2000); Porter (2000) Loss or disruption of biodiversity Harris (1984); Kautz (1993) Economic Higher infrastructure and public service costs Burchell et al. (2000); Ewing (1997); Frank (1989) Inner-city decline Frey and Fielding (1995); Wilson (1996) Social Racial segregation Ewing (1997); Stoll (2005) Weakened social ties Freeman (2001) Increasing obesity and blood pressure Lopez and Hynes (2003); McCann and Ewing (2003); Saelens et al (2003) LITERATURE REVIEW: URBAN FORM AND WASTE MANAGEMENT While previous land use planning has largely limited to waste facility siting, multi-disciplinary literature suggests that urban form interacts with waste management in multiple ways. This section gathers empirical evidence from multiple disciplines and discusses the implications of community characteristics for waste management planning. ...