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Journal Article
A Note on the Changing Geography of Cancer Mortality within Metropolitan Regions of the United States
Available to Purchase
Demography (1981) 18 (3): 411–420.
Published: 01 August 1981
... the use of U.S. Census Bureau definitions of cen- tral cities and suburbs of the Standard Metropolitan Statistical Areas. Instead of the desired detail, SMSAs could only be disaggregated following county bounda- ries. The counties containing the central cities are referred to as central city coun- ties...
Journal Article
The applicability of the burgess zonal hypothesis to urban Canada
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Demography (1969) 6 (3): 271–277.
Published: 01 August 1969
... the outskirts as cities grow. 30 12 2010 © Population Association of America 1969 1969 Central City Canadian City Dominion Bureau Tral City United States Area An erratum to this article is available at http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2060092 . References Charles Enid...
Journal Article
Metropolitan deconcentration: Subareal inmigration and central city to ring mobility patterns among southern SMSAs
Available to Purchase
Demography (1978) 15 (4): 589–603.
Published: 01 November 1978
... apparent, however. In his study of the 11 SMSAs with the largest shares of black population in 1970, Long found the three southern cities of this group-Atlanta, New Orleans, and Baltimore-to be the only exceptions to a trend of increasing dominance of black population in the cen- tral cities. Furthermore...
View articletitled, Metropolitan deconcentration: Subareal inmigration and central <span class="search-highlight">city</span> to ring mobility patterns among southern SMSAs
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Journal Article
Family Size Composition Differentials between Central City-Suburb and Metropolitan-Nonmetropolltan Migration Streams
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Demography (1982) 19 (1): 29–36.
Published: 01 February 1982
.... ( 1978 ). The Changing Character of the Nonmetropolitan Population, 1950–75 . In T. R. Ford (Ed.), Rural U.S.A.: Persistence and Change . Ames : Iowa State University Press . DEMOGRAPHV© Volume 19, Number 1 February 1982 FAMILY SIZE COMPOSITION DIFFERENTIALS BETWEEN CEN- TRAL CITY-SUBURB...
View articletitled, Family Size Composition Differentials between Central <span class="search-highlight">City</span>-Suburb and Metropolitan-Nonmetropolltan Migration Streams
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Journal Article
The residential segregation of occupational groups in central cities and suburbs
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Demography (1971) 8 (1): 91–101.
Published: 01 February 1971
... tends to contain a more homogeneous popula- tion than the central city, then its valid- ity is hardly in doubt. However, most of the authors imply, and some explicitly state, that suburban neighborhoods are typically more homogeneous than cen- tral city neighborhoods. References to "one-class" suburbs...
Journal Article
Patterns of suburban population growth, 1970–75
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Demography (1979) 16 (3): 401–415.
Published: 01 August 1979
... measured as the census year in which the central city first achieved 50,000 popu- lation. Metropolitan areas with older cen- tral cities are frequently characterized by low or negative rates of central city popu- lation growth and high rates of suburban growth. Older areas developed in a period of more...
Journal Article
Residential segregation of Spanish Americans in United States Urbanized Areas
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Demography (1979) 16 (4): 553–563.
Published: 01 November 1979
... in a cen- tral city and the relative number of Spanish who are foreign stock, are both highly related, across urbanized areas, to variations in the level of Spanish- white segregation. INTRODUCTION The Spanish American population is a large and growing minority in the United States. In 1970, New York...
Journal Article
Metropolitan structure and commutation
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Demography (1964) 1 (1): 186–193.
Published: 01 March 1964
... worker who lives in the cen- tral city works there, and every worker who lives in the ring works in the ring. T = 1. This situation suggests complete separation of the central city and ring and the existence of two separate economies if an economy can be defined in terms of commutation. 2. Workers...
Journal Article
The three R's: Residence, religion, and reproduction
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Demography (1972) 9 (2): 231–240.
Published: 01 May 1972
...) as in the suburban portion of a metropolitan area? suburbs (0.4). Within each religious cat- (2) Are there differences in the extent of egory, suburban residents expected some- religious participation of central city and what larger families than did their cen- suburban residents? (3) If so, does con- tral city...
Journal Article
Shopping center location and retail store mix in metropolitan areas
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Demography (1969) 6 (2): 125–131.
Published: 01 May 1969
... axial routes toward a hub of cen- tral activity. The dominant position of downtown in our old industrial cities attests to this massing. The growth of urban areas by accretion and the shift to personal transportation by automobile has disrupted the efficiency of the com- pactly organized, mono-centered...
Journal Article
Urban growth and population densities
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Demography (1973) 10 (1): 53–69.
Published: 01 February 1973
... population by 1970. In fact, declining central cities lost more people in the 1960's than were lost by declining rural countries. Over half the 1970 metro- politan population lived outside the cen- tral city, and suburb an areas captured almost all the metropolitan growth during the decade. While these data...
Journal Article
Duration of residence and prospective migration: Further evidence
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Demography (1969) 6 (2): 133–140.
Published: 01 May 1969
... are 45.5 and 50.7. See Gibbs, 1961, Table 1.) Hence, the population of Mexico has recently experienced relatively more rural-urban movement than the population of The Netherlands. Morrison's Dutch sampie was drawn in mid-1965 from two purposively-se- lected urban municipalities: (1) the een- tral city...
Journal Article
The political economy of inequality in the “age of extremes”
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Demography (1996) 33 (4): 421–425.
Published: 01 November 1996
... "redlining the layout of federally funded free- ways, and urban renewal were all powerful practices that shored up racial segregation in the face of massive internal migration after World War II. Today zoning, redlining, school district gerrymandering, and suburbs' autonomy from cen- tral-city governments...
Journal Article
Class, ethnicity, and residence in metropolitan America
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Demography (1968) 5 (1): 443–448.
Published: 01 March 1968
... of the total white population in 1960, but approximately three-fourths of it resided in SMA's, especially in the cen- tral cities of SMSA's. The existence of racial and ethnic ghet- tos in American cities has been a fact of popular knowledge as well as of sociologi- cal investigation for a long time. In recent...
Journal Article
A further look at catholic fertility
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Demography (1966) 3 (2): 462–469.
Published: 01 June 1966
... 3.2 468 DEMOGRAPHY tral city residents. The significance of place of residence is particularly marked among those who have completed their fertility. Again we find that for Protes- tants the number of children ever born in the suburbs is equal to or exceeds the rate in the central city, but among...
Journal Article
Mover Destination Selectivity and the Changing Suburbanization of Metropolitan Whites and Blacks
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Demography (1985) 22 (2): 223–243.
Published: 01 May 1985
..., and household type as defined at the end of the period. The SMSAs used in the analysis are listed in the appendix. Each of these SMSAs have 1980 population sizes greater than one million, have cen- tral city black populations that comprise at least ten percent of the total central city size, and are older...
Journal Article
Urbanization in Thailand, 1947–1967
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Demography (1971) 8 (2): 205–223.
Published: 01 May 1971
... Phitsanu1ok(N) 33,233 Lampang(Nl · · 40,515 Nakorn 10 Chon Buri (Cl 17,671 Songkla(S) · · 31,488 Sithamarat(S) 39,426 Total. 981,616 Total. · · 2,150,206 Total. 3,072,593 Region symbols: C, Central; NE, Northeast: N, North; and S, South. cities in 1947 was Chonburi in the Cen- tral region with 17,671 persons...
Journal Article
Review Symposia
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Demography (1977) 14 (4): 557–562.
Published: 01 November 1977
... in support of these assertions and would probably be surprised by chapter 18 in the same book showing marked declines be- tween 1950 and 1970 in rates of internal migration in many countries of East-Cen- tral Europe. "The most important charac- teristic of temporal trends was the decline of mobility in all...
Journal Article
Residential segregation in urbanized areas of the United States in 1970: An analysis of social class and racial differences
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Demography (1977) 14 (4): 497–518.
Published: 01 November 1977
..., In- dianapolis, and Providence-fell from the ranks of the top 25 and were replaced by Miami, Denver, San Diego, and San Jose. Computations were made for each cen- tral city of an urbanized area and for the entire suburban ring, that is, the area out- side the central city or cities but within the urbanized area...
Journal Article
The educational enrollment of immigrant youth: A test of the segmented-assimilation hypothesis
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Demography (2001) 38 (3): 317–336.
Published: 01 August 2001
... of concentrated poverty and ur- ban decay, but the rarity of native-born youths living in cen- tral cities suggests that this is not the preferred environment for families with teenage children. About one-half of native-born adolescents live in a household where the householder has some tertiary educa- tion...
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