A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
Modeling Income-Based Residential Segregation in Moscow, Russian Federation
This thesis investigates spatial patterns of income-based residential segregation at the neighborhood level in the Russian capital city Moscow within new administrative boundaries, which have received relatively little attention in prior studies. It is argued that Moscow faces high levels of income inequality exacerbated by growing levels of spatial segregation between the affluent and prestigious Center – South-West and poor industrial South – South-East. Applying a whole set of quantitative methods complemented with computer mapping techniques, based on the latest 2013 data by the City of Moscow Territorial Branch of the Federal State Statistics and 2010 Census data, this study provides new insights into spatial differentiation processes and elaborates policy solutions aimed at addressing economic disparities in the city. A key finding of this thesis is that income segregation in the study area has been driven to a larger extent by the isolation of very poor neighborhoods from middle- and upper-income areas.
Modeling Income-Based Residential Segregation in Moscow, Russian Federation
This thesis investigates spatial patterns of income-based residential segregation at the neighborhood level in the Russian capital city Moscow within new administrative boundaries, which have received relatively little attention in prior studies. It is argued that Moscow faces high levels of income inequality exacerbated by growing levels of spatial segregation between the affluent and prestigious Center – South-West and poor industrial South – South-East. Applying a whole set of quantitative methods complemented with computer mapping techniques, based on the latest 2013 data by the City of Moscow Territorial Branch of the Federal State Statistics and 2010 Census data, this study provides new insights into spatial differentiation processes and elaborates policy solutions aimed at addressing economic disparities in the city. A key finding of this thesis is that income segregation in the study area has been driven to a larger extent by the isolation of very poor neighborhoods from middle- and upper-income areas.
Modeling Income-Based Residential Segregation in Moscow, Russian Federation
Akhmetzyanova, Leyla (author)
2015-01-01
Theses
Electronic Resource
English
INTERIOR DESIGN - Club, Moscow, Russian Federation - VLADIMIR KUZMIN AND VLADISLAV SAVINKIN
Online Contents | 2003
International Conference on Sustainable Cities : 18 May 2018, Moscow, Russian Federation
TIBKAT | 2018
|The Structure of Income Residential Segregation in Canadian Metropolitan Areas
Online Contents | 2002
|Relationship between income inequality and residential segregation of socioeconomic groups
Taylor & Francis Verlag | 2020
|