2014
DOI: 10.1080/00045608.2014.968977
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Patterns of Socioeconomic Segregation in the Capital Cities of Fast-Track Reforming Postsocialist Countries

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Cited by 90 publications
(121 citation statements)
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References 90 publications
(108 reference statements)
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“…Our findings support comparative research on segregation in post-socialist and Western countries (Marcińczak et al 2015, Musterd et al 2017, although residential segregation in Warsaw started to resemble the pattern of Western capitals, it still gained low levels in heterogenity neighbourhoods. Nevertheless, these low levels may be associated with delayed segregation and its dormant potential, as the deep liberalisation transformation in the housing system and the welfare regime has brought an increase in income disparities, but with spatial diversity less visible in the statistical analyses.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 77%
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“…Our findings support comparative research on segregation in post-socialist and Western countries (Marcińczak et al 2015, Musterd et al 2017, although residential segregation in Warsaw started to resemble the pattern of Western capitals, it still gained low levels in heterogenity neighbourhoods. Nevertheless, these low levels may be associated with delayed segregation and its dormant potential, as the deep liberalisation transformation in the housing system and the welfare regime has brought an increase in income disparities, but with spatial diversity less visible in the statistical analyses.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 77%
“…Ursynów Północny's planners from the 1970s attempted to form resident-friendly elements, such as creating small clusters of buildings surrounding inner yards, and diversified heights and (Figure 4a). 4 In the 1990s many of the buildings and surrounding areas were modernised, which supports research indicating that the socialist era high-rise housing estates have not become slums as they are still inhabited by mixed populations (Marcińczak et al 2015, Gorczyca 2016, Szafrańska 2013. At present, the estates in the north of Ursynów boast a good internal (inside the estates as such, and between them) and external (with other districts of Warsaw) spatial integration.…”
Section: Socio-spatial Processes Accompanying Residential Segregationsupporting
confidence: 51%
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“…in Vilnius or Tallinn, cf. Marcińczak et al 2014b), or by simply freezing the patterns inherited from the past (static status quo). Luhansk, and perhaps most other regional capitals in the post-Soviet realm (cf.…”
Section: Conclusion: Khrushchev-era Blocks "Bad" Areas and The Pauvmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The apartments in housing estates gradually have lost their prestige and older inner-city districts have become attractive gentrified places . Although the panel-housing areas have maintained a certain mixed socio-economic status (Kährik and Tammaru, 2010;Temelová et al, 2011;Marcińczak et al, 2015), gradual sorting of high social status people from the socialist modernist housing and into suburbs or gentrifying districts is an ongoing reality. The former inner-city districts have transformed into diverse social environments, where both former residents (often less affluent, older, and with industrial worker background) live alongside newcomers (young households, students or specific lifestyle groups who value culturally attractive historical neighbourhoods near the amenities of the city centre).…”
Section: Socio-spatial Changes and Urban Governance Practices In Postmentioning
confidence: 99%