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Data in Action: Racial/Ethnic Neighborhood Change and the Distribution of Health-Related Urban Amenities Over Time (Seminar)

 

Data in Action: Racial/Ethnic Neighborhood Change and the Distribution of Health-Related Urban Amenities Over Time

Seminar: November 20, 12:00-1:00pm

Related Workshop: Thursday, Nov. 20 and Friday, Nov. 21

 

Presenter: 

Kate Anderson, University of Houston

 

Co-Sponsored by:

The Race & Ethnic Studies Institute (RESI)

&

The Texas Federal Statistical Data Research Center (TXRDC)

Texas A&M University College of Arts and Sciences

 

 

Recent work has demonstrated that racial/ethnic minoritized neighborhoods across the U.S. are less likely to have health-promoting urban amenities. However, what is unclear from this work is whether this is part of a longitudinal process whereby changes in the racial/ethnic composition of neighborhoods lead to changes in the organizational composition.  This study addresses this question by two means–examining counts of organizations by ZIP codes over time using the County Business Patterns (CBP) and the closure of establishments over a twenty-eight-year period using the restricted access version of that data, the Longitudinal Business Database (LBD).  We find that percent Black is related to a lack of a wide variety of key health-related establishments.  Moreover, this is a dynamic process where, as the share of Black residents increases over time, they are more likely to experience closures of these types of organizations, even when controlling for area socio-economic indicators and establishment-level performance.  The results for percent Latino and percent Asian were mixed and highly dependent on the organization type.  However, the opposite is the case for White ZIP codes.  A higher percentage of White residents is related to more of these resources and a reduced risk of closure over time.

RSVP for Seminar and Workshop HERE

Bio:

Kathryn Freeman Anderson is an Associate Professor and the Associate Chair in the Department of Sociology at the University of Houston. She received a Ph.D. in Sociology from the University of Arizona in 2016.  The key theme of her research investigates how social contexts impact individual-level well-being. More specifically, she focuses on how several contextual environments, such as neighborhoods, race relations, inequality, and organizations, shape the health of the individuals embedded within these various arenas. Her research bridges the substantive areas of population health, urban sociology, and racial/ethnic relations while utilizing a number of methodological approaches, chiefly quantitative methods, spatial analytic techniques, and Geographic Information Science (GIS).