Escaping Car Dependence in the Outer Suburbs of Paris
The outer suburbs of Paris are home to a large number of low-income households driven from the centre by the workings of the property market. This shift could give rise to a new form of socio-spatial segregation insofar as the elevated costs of mobility in such highly car-dependent areas restrict and change these households' mobility patterns. These effects were observed in data on three groups of working people from the 2001 global transport survey. However, the socio-spatial impact of this outward movement is significantly reduced by the residential mobility of low-income households, which move from the most car-dependent areas to denser areas with better public transport provision. The presence of social housing in these areas only partially explains these migrations. These results obtained from 1999 census micro-data cast doubt upon the emergence of a new form of segregation in the outer suburbs described by Dodson and Sipe.
Year of publication: |
2010
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Authors: | Motte-Baumvol, Benjamin ; Massot, Marie-Helene ; Byrd, Andrew M. |
Published in: |
Urban Studies. - Urban Studies Journal Limited. - Vol. 47.2010, 3, p. 604-619
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Publisher: |
Urban Studies Journal Limited |
Saved in:
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