Urban inequalities in the 21st century economy.

Jan Nijman, Yehua Dennis Wei
Author Information
  1. Jan Nijman: Urban Studies Institute and Geosciences Department, Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA, 30303, USA.
  2. Yehua Dennis Wei: Department of Geography, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, 84112-9155, USA.

Abstract

In the last decade or so, inequality studies have assumed renewed prominence across the social sciences. In this introduction to a special issue of , we set out to articulate the importance of urban spatial context in broader present-day inequality debates. We argue that the information-based economy is emphatically urban-based and that it has forged new spatial inequalities in and between cities and among urban populations. Income gaps have widened, inter-city disparities have grown, suburbs have been re-sorted into a wide array on the basis of class and race or ethnicity, and many central cities have assumed a renewed importance within metropolitan areas. We argue that attention to urban spatial dimensions at various scales is critical to understanding current inequality trends, from intra-urban to regional and global scales. Contributions to this special issue from North America, Europe, South America, and China suggest that deepening urban inequalities are pervasive across the globe.

Keywords

References

  1. City Community. 2013 Jun;12(2):89-112 [PMID: 27390552]
  2. Health Policy. 2013 Dec;113(3):221-7 [PMID: 23810172]
  3. Br J Sociol. 2014 Dec;65(4):736-47 [PMID: 25516350]
  4. Annu Rev Sociol. 1991;17:467-501 [PMID: 12285403]
  5. Lancet. 2017 Mar 4;389(10072):941-950 [PMID: 28271845]
  6. Public Health Rep. 2001 Sep-Oct;116(5):404-16 [PMID: 12042604]
  7. AJS. 2011 Jan;116(4):1092-153 [PMID: 21648248]
  8. Transfer (Bruss). 2017 May;23(2):135-162 [PMID: 28781494]
  9. Demography. 2004 Aug;41(3):585-605 [PMID: 15461016]
  10. Am J Prev Med. 2003 Apr;24(3 Suppl):47-67 [PMID: 12668198]
  11. Race Soc Probl. 2013 Sep;5(3):173-190 [PMID: 24077641]

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0inequalityurbanspatialeconomyinequalitiesassumedrenewedacrossspecialissueimportancearguecitiesscalesAmericaUrbanlastdecadestudiesprominencesocialsciencesintroductionsetarticulatecontextbroaderpresent-daydebatesinformation-basedemphaticallyurban-basedforgednewamongpopulationsIncomegapswidenedinter-citydisparitiesgrownsuburbsre-sortedwidearraybasisclassraceethnicitymanycentralwithinmetropolitanareasattentiondimensionsvariouscriticalunderstandingcurrenttrendsintra-urbanregionalglobalContributionsNorthEuropeSouthChinasuggestdeepeningpervasiveglobe21stcenturyNewScaleSpatialSpatiality

Similar Articles

Cited By (19)