Searched for: author%3A%22Petrovi%C4%87%2C+A.%22
(1 - 16 of 16)
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Petrović, A. (author), van Ham, M. (author), Manley, D.J. (author)
poster 2017
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Petrović, A. (author), van Ham, M. (author), Manley, D.J. (author)
Appreciating spatial scale is crucial for our understanding of the sociospatial context. Multiscale measures of population have been developed in the segregation and neighborhood effects literatures, which have acknowledged the role of a variety of spatial contexts for individual outcomes and intergroup contacts. Although existing studies...
journal article 2018
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Petrović, A. (author), van Ham, M. (author), Manley, D.J. (author)
Contextual poverty is a multiscale phenomenon which affects socioeconomic outcomes of people as well asindividual decisions to move in or out of the neighbourhood. Large-scale poverty reflects regional economicstructures. Meso-scale concentrations of poverty within cities are related to city-specific social, economic andhousing characteristics....
conference paper 2018
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Petrović, A. (author), van Ham, M. (author), Manley, D.J. (author)
abstract 2018
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Petrović, A. (author), Manley, D.J. (author), van Ham, M. (author)
abstract 2018
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Petrović, A. (author), van Ham, M. (author), Janssen, H.J. (author), Manley, D.J. (author), Tammaru, T. (author)
The project investigated ethnic segregation in seven European capitals, namely Amsterdam, Berlin, Lisbon, London, Madrid, Paris, and Rome. These cities present a mix of immigration and welfare contexts in Europe. The study looked at the levels of ethnic segregation in each city and how these levels vary between them, how segregation manifests...
book chapter 2018
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Petrović, A. (author), Manley, D.J. (author), van Ham, M. (author)
Theory behind neighbourhood effects suggests that different geographies and scales affect individual outcomes. We argue that neighbourhood effects research needs to break away from the tyranny of neighbourhood and consider alternative ways to measure the wider socio-spatial context of people, placing individuals at the centre of the approach. We...
working paper 2018
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Petrović, A. (author), Manley, D.J. (author), van Ham, M. (author)
Theory behind neighbourhood effects suggests that people’s spatial context potentially affects individual outcomes across multiple scales and geographies. We argue that neighbourhood effects research needs to break away from the ‘tyranny’ of neighbourhood and consider alternative ways to measure the wider sociospatial context of people, placing...
journal article 2019
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Petrović, A. (author)
This thesis has developed alternative methods of operationalising neighbourhoods at multiple spatial scales and used them to advance our understanding of spatial inequalities and neighbourhood effects. The underlying problem that motivated this thesis is that many empirical studies use predefined administrative units, and often this does not...
doctoral thesis 2020
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Petrović, A. (author), Manley, D.J. (author), van Ham, M. (author)
Contextual poverty refers to high proportions of people with a low income in a certain (residential) space, and it can affect individual socioeconomic outcomes as well as decisions to move into or out of the neighbourhood. Contextual poverty is a multiscale phenomenon: Poverty levels at the regional scale reflect regional economic development,...
journal article 2021
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Petrović, A. (author), van Ham, M. (author), Manley, D.J. (author)
There is no theoretical reason to assume that neighborhood effects operate at a constant single spatial scale across multiple urban settings or over different periods of time. Despite this, many studies use large, single-scale, predefined spatial units as proxies for neighborhoods. Recently, the use of bespoke neighborhoods has challenged the...
journal article 2022
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Tao, Y. (author), Petrović, A. (author), van Ham, M. (author)
The relationship between commuting behaviours and subjective wellbeing has been fascinating scholars of different disciplines. Especially in the last decade, longitudinal research designs have made great progress in identifying causality in the commuting-wellbeing relationship by focusing on within-individual variations over time. However,...
journal article 2022
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Tao, Y. (author), van Ham, M. (author), Petrović, A. (author), Ta, Na (author)
Research on the experienced utility of commuting time is dominated by an individualistic view of choice concerning the trade-offs between long commutes and job- or housing-related benefits. The widely discussed phenomenon of the commuting paradox shows that individuals systematically report worse subjective wellbeing as commuting time...
journal article 2023
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Tao, Y. (author), Petrović, A. (author), van Ham, M. (author)
Working from home (WFH) was prevalent among previous daily commuters during the COVID-19 pandemic and is expected to continue in post-COVID-19 society. By using WFH enforced by the UK government during the pandemic as a real-world experiment, our study investigates the relationship between switching from commuting to WFH, and subjective...
journal article 2023
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Tao, Y. (author), Petrović, A. (author), van Ham, M. (author), Fu, Xingxing (author)
Residential self-selection studies argue that pre-existing travel-related attitude overshadows the role of changes in residential built environment in (re)shaping travel behaviours. Our study contributes to this self-selection argument by including family- and job-related life events as another self-selection source, and accounting for the...
journal article 2023
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Tao, Y. (author), van Ham, M. (author), Petrović, A. (author)
Emerging longitudinal research on the relationship between commuting mode and psychological wellbeing draws exclusively from cities in developed countries and the findings are not consistent. Our study contributes to the evidence base from urban China, where rapid urban growth has raised great concerns for urbanites’ commuting problems and...
journal article 2024
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