Creator | Title | Description | Subject | Date | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 |
![]() | Sanchez, Thomas W. | Debunking the exurban myth: a comparison of suburban households | As American cities spill over their traditional boundaries into 'exurbia', the debate about whether this new growth is substantively different from what preceded is an important one. We disagree with the idea that the counterurbanization the United States is experiencing represents a dramatic bre... | Demographics; Location; Suburban | 1999 |
2 |
![]() | Sanchez, Thomas W. | Distinguishing city and suburban movers: evidence from the American Housing Survey | A significant amount of research has concentrated on the process of urban decentralization. Resulting patterns of urban development have far-reaching effects on land use, transportation, regional fiscal structure, public services and facilities, economic development, and social equity. Because plann... | Location; Mobility; Suburban; Urban | 2001 |
3 |
![]() | Sanchez, Thomas W. | Exurban and suburban residents: a departure from traditional location theory | During the 1990s, the exurban landscape grew faster and added more people than urban, suburban, and rural landscapes. In many respects, exurbanization is the quintessential representation of urban sprawl and the problems it poses. More than 100 metropolitan areas across the US attempt to manage exu... | Household location; Exurbanization; Location theory | 1997 |
4 |
![]() | Yu, Zhou | Regional disparities in homeownership trajectories: impacts of affordability, new construction, and immigration | In contrast to the 1980s, we find substantial increases in the homeownership rates of young adults in the 1990s. Focusing on the younger half of the baby boom generation, aged 35 to 44 in 2000, we explore the factors that caused steeper trajectories into homeownership in some ... | Demographics; Homeownership; Immigration | 2005 |