1984
DOI: 10.1080/00224545.1984.9922842
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The Structure of Community Satisfaction in a British and an American Community

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Cited by 30 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…As with studies evaluating the popular appeal of New Urbanist designs, some of the inconsistency in the results reported by previous studies on residential satisfaction may have to do with systematic differences in preferences across the populations or residential settings where the studies were conducted (Bardo and Hughey, 1984;Hur and Morrow-Jones, 2008). A few studies have explicitly examined whether the determinants of residential satisfaction are different across different residential settings.…”
Section: Neighborhood Satisfactionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As with studies evaluating the popular appeal of New Urbanist designs, some of the inconsistency in the results reported by previous studies on residential satisfaction may have to do with systematic differences in preferences across the populations or residential settings where the studies were conducted (Bardo and Hughey, 1984;Hur and Morrow-Jones, 2008). A few studies have explicitly examined whether the determinants of residential satisfaction are different across different residential settings.…”
Section: Neighborhood Satisfactionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the definitions to which an informational component is significant, user satisfaction in housing is constituted by the corresponding factors between the current conditions of the users and the standards they expect and demand (Campbell et al, 1976;Marans & Rodgers, 1975;Wiesenfeld, 1992). In the informational approach, Bardo & Hughey (1984), Canter & Rees (1982), Morrissy & Handal (1981) suggested that if the gap between demands and needs decreases, housing area user satisfaction increases.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, Bardo and Hughey (1984) revealed in their study that the domains and structures of 'community satisfaction' in a British and an American community were not the same cross-culturally. Zube et al (1985) also reported cultural differences between Arab and American perceptions of residential quality and urban sound in their study.…”
Section: Research Objectivementioning
confidence: 98%