1977
DOI: 10.1177/016001767700200104
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Intra- Urban Residential Mobility: A Review and Synthesis

Abstract: THIS PAPER PROVIDES A CRITICAL REVIEW AND SURVEY OF THE AVAILABLE EVIDENCE ON INTRA-URBAN HOUSEHOLD MOBILITY AND A SYNTHESIS OF THE THEORETICAL CONTRIBUTIONS OF SOCIAL SCIENTISTS TO UNDERSTANDING THE DETERMINANTS OF LOCAL MOBILITY. THE ANALYSIS ATTEMPTS TO RECONCILE THESE PERSPECTIVES AND THE EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE INTO A UNIFIED THEORY OF THE MOBILITY DECISION BASED ON MEASURABLE CONCEPTS, AND IT PRESENTS SOME IMPLICATIONS FOR EMPIRICAL RESEARCH.

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Cited by 266 publications
(142 citation statements)
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“…The underlying assumption is that the mobility process in local housing markets is about bringing household demand for space into equilibrium with the housing available (Clark and Dieleman, 1996). The earliest work by Hanushek and Quigley (1978) and Quigley and Weinberg (1978), set the residential mobility process within the notions of disequilbrium and related the decision to move to a trade off between current housing and desired housing. That research was elaborated with studies addressing the relationship between tenure (renting versus owning) and the moving process, and the association between changes in the life course and changes in residential choice (Clark and Dieleman, 1996).…”
Section: Theory and Context Of Previous Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The underlying assumption is that the mobility process in local housing markets is about bringing household demand for space into equilibrium with the housing available (Clark and Dieleman, 1996). The earliest work by Hanushek and Quigley (1978) and Quigley and Weinberg (1978), set the residential mobility process within the notions of disequilbrium and related the decision to move to a trade off between current housing and desired housing. That research was elaborated with studies addressing the relationship between tenure (renting versus owning) and the moving process, and the association between changes in the life course and changes in residential choice (Clark and Dieleman, 1996).…”
Section: Theory and Context Of Previous Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Clark y Onaka (1983) señalaron la influencia de los factores institucionales en los movimientos forzados, algo que reemprenderemos en conclusiones. Ellos, como ya habían hecho Quigley y Weinberg (1977), mostraron que la frontera entre voluntariedad e involuntariedad puede ser borrosa; por ejemplo: cuando se trata de movilidad por motivos de salud. Por eso, los movimientos forzados serían más frecuentes al final del ciclo de vida.…”
Section: Marco Teóricounclassified
“…This literature has generally focused on mobility flows within a particular city or metropolitan area. An advantage of studies that focus on intra-metropolitan moves based on household-level data is that they can take into account household-level characteristics that come into play in the mobility decision (Quigley and Weinberg 1977). Certain characteristics can impact the distance residents move, which can have consequences for the observed move distances.…”
Section: Intra-metropolitan Mobilitymentioning
confidence: 99%