Changing occupational structures and residential segregation in New York, London and Tokyo

Journal Article (2020)
Author(s)

Maarten Ham (TU Delft - Urbanism, University of St Andrews)

M. Uesugi (Fukuoka Institute of Technology)

T. Tammaru (TU Delft - Urban Studies, University of Tartu)

David Manley (University of Bristol, TU Delft - Urban Studies)

Heleen J. Janssen (TU Delft - Urban Studies)

Department
Urbanism
Copyright
© 2020 M. van Ham, M. Uesugi, T. Tammaru, D.J. Manley, H.J. Janssen
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41562-020-0927-5
More Info
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Publication Year
2020
Language
English
Copyright
© 2020 M. van Ham, M. Uesugi, T. Tammaru, D.J. Manley, H.J. Janssen
Related content
Department
Urbanism
Issue number
11
Volume number
4
Pages (from-to)
1124-1134
Reuse Rights

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Abstract

Based on data from the 1980s, Sassen’s influential book ‘The Global City’ interrogated how changes in the occupational structure affect socio-economic residential segregation in global cities. Here, using data for New York City, London and Tokyo, we reframe and answer this question for recent decades. Our analysis shows an increase in the share of high-income occupations, accompanied by a fall in low-income occupations in all three cities, providing strong evidence for a consistent trend of professionalization of the workforce. Segregation was highest in New York and lowest in Tokyo. In New York and London, individuals in high-income occupations are concentrating in the city centre, while low-income occupations are pushed to urban peripheries. Professionalization of the workforce is accompanied by reduced levels of segregation by income, and two ongoing megatrends in urban change: gentrification of inner-city neighbourhoods and suburbanization of poverty, with larger changes in the social geography than in levels of segregation.

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