This paper extends the search for neighborhood contextual effects to residential mobility. We propose that neighborhood consists of subjective and objective domains, both of which are crosscut by substantive (social/physical) and temporal (current/change) dimensions. Measures of neighborhood characteristics consistent with our conceptualization are used to estimate the impact of context on mobility thoughts and on actual mobility in a sample of Nashville residents. Although individual statuses such as age and tenure remain important antecedents of mobility, subjective features of neighborhood context also play a role-albeit limited and indirect-in the decision to move or to stay. © 1994 Population Association of America.
CITATION STYLE
Lee, B. A., Oropesa, R. S., & Kanan, J. W. (1994). Neighborhood Context and Residential Mobility. Demography, 31(2), 249–270. https://doi.org/10.2307/2061885
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