Print Email Facebook Twitter Macro-, Meso- and Microscale Segregation: Modeling Changing Ethnic Residential Patterns in Auckland, New Zealand, 2001–2013 Title Macro-, Meso- and Microscale Segregation: Modeling Changing Ethnic Residential Patterns in Auckland, New Zealand, 2001–2013 Author Manley, D.J. Johnston, R. Jones, K. Owen, D. Faculty Architecture and The Built Environment Department OTB Date 2015-09-14 Abstract “David Manley's contribution was partially supported by funding from the European Research Council under the European Union's Seventy Framework Programme (FP/2007–2013)/ERC Grant Agreement n.615159 (ERC Consolidator Grant “DEPRIVEDHOODS, Socio-spatial inequality, deprived neighbourhoods, and neighbourhood effects.)” Most world cities can now be characterized as multiethnic and multicultural in their population composition, and the residential patterning of their major component ethnic groups remains a topic of substantial research interest. Many studies of the degree of residential segregation of ethnic groups recognize that this is multiscalar in its composition, but few have incorporated this major feature into their analyses: Those that do mostly conclude that segregation is greater at the microscale than at the macroscale. This article uses a recently developed alternative procedure for assessing the degree of segregation that differs from all others in that it analyzes the geography of all groups simultaneously, providing a single, synoptic view of their relative segregation; can incorporate data for more than one date and therefore evaluate the statistical significance of the extent of any change over time; operates at several geographical scales, allowing appreciation of the extent of clustering and congregation for the various ethnic groups at different levels of spatial resolution; and—most important—is based on a firm statistical foundation that allows for robust assessments of differences in the levels of segregation for different groups between each other at different scales over time. This modeling procedure is illustrated by a three-scale analysis of ethnic residential segregation in Auckland, New Zealand, as depicted by the country’s 2001, 2006, and 2013 censuses. Subject Aucklandethnicitysegregationspatial scale To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:084b1461-5c49-42e4-b796-66a9ccab48c8 Publisher Taylor & Francis ISSN 0004-5608 Source https://doi.org/10.1080/00045608.2015.1066739 Source Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 105 (5), 2015 Part of collection Institutional Repository Document type journal article Rights © 2015 The Author(s) Files PDF 317586.pdf 1023.62 KB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:084b1461-5c49-42e4-b796-66a9ccab48c8/datastream/OBJ/view