[Image: Compass Rose] the social areas of cincinnati

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Appendices

 

Appendix I: References

 

Appendix II: SES Index and Variables for the Cincinnati City Census Tracts

 

Appendix III: Neighborhood Changes 1970-2000

 

Appendix IV: SES Index and Variables for Metropolitan Census Tracts

 

Appendix V: Definition of Variables

 



Appendix I

 

References for Chapter 1

  1. Shevkey, Eshref, and Marilyn Williams, The Social Areas of Los Angeles, University of California Press, Berkeley, 1949.
  2. ibid, preface
  3. Bell, Wendell, "Social Areas: Typology of Urban Neighborhoods", in Sussman, Marvin, B., ed., Community Structure and Analysis, Thomas Y. Corwell, New York, 1959.
  4. Shevkey and Williams, op. cit., and Tryon, Robert C., Identification of Social Areas by Cluster Analysis (Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1955).
  5. Greer, Kaufman and Van Arsdel, et al., "An Investigation into the Generality of the Shevky Social Area Indexes", American Sociological Review, Vol. 23 (June, 1958), pp. 277-284; and Green, Kaufman and Van Arsdel, et al., "A Deviant Case of Shevky's Dimensions of Urban Structure", Proceedings of the Pacific Sociological Society in Research Studies in the State College of Washington, Vol. 25 (June, 1957).
  6. The "New Haven" Methodology was adopted by Moroney, Maloney, and May in 1972 from Health Information System II, Volume 12 of the Census Use Series published by the U.S. Department of Commerce for the 1970 census.
  7. Hill, Robert B., "The Illusion of Black Progress". Social Policy, November/December, 1978, pp. 14-25.

References for Chapter 2

  1. Maloney, Michael E., The Social Areas of Cincinnati, 1970, Cincinnati Human Relations Commission, January, 1974.
  2. Non-agricultural Wage and Salary Employment in Cincinnati Metropolitan Area, Ohio Bureau of Employment Services, Labor Market Information Division 2928 8/228, 1984.
  3. Maloney, Michael E., The Social Areas of Cincinnati, 1970, Cincinnati Human Relations Commission, January, 1974.

References for Chapter 3

  1. Wallace, 1967.
  2. Moroney, Robert; Maloney, Michael; and May, Leslie; "Social Planning Uses of Urban Planning Information Systems", Department of City and Regional Planning, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, September, 1972.

References for Chapter 5

  1. Obermiller, Phillip J. and Michael Maloney, "The Current and Future Prospects of Urban Appalachians" in Borman, Kathryn, and Phillip J. Obermiller, From Mountain to Metropolis, Bergen and Earvey 1994.
  2. Maloney, Michael E., The Social Areas of Cincinnati, 1980, Cincinnati Human Relations Commission, January, 1986.

References for Chapter 6

  1. Michael Maloney (Urban Applachian Council Working Paper Number 15, April 25, 1985)
  2. The Cincinnati Enquirer reported in January 1996.
  3. Hoeweler, Fred, unpublished data, 1995.

References for Chapter 7

  1. The Council on Aging has sponsored research on some subgroups. See also David Varaday's paper on the Appalachian Elderly, an Urban Appalachian Council Working Paper.
  2. The Cincinnati Post, February 19, 1997.

References for Chapter 10

  1. Rusk, David in Gilligan, John J., and William K. Woods, eds. The Challenge of Regionalism: A Civic Forum Report, University of Cincinnati College of Law, Fall, 1996, p. 9.
  2. Rusk, ibid, p. 6-7.

References for Chapter 11

  1. Wilson, William Julium (1996), When Work Disappears: The World of the New Urban Poor. Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. New York.
  2. Haveman, Robert (1994). The Nature, Causes, and Cures of Poverty: Accomplishments from Three Decades of Poverty Research and Policy. In S.H. Danziger, G. D. Sandefur, and D.H. Weinberg (Eds), Confronting Poverty: Prescriptions for Change. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts.
  3. Blank, Rebecca (1994). The Employment Strategy: Public Policies to Increase Work and Earnings. In S.H. Danziger, G.D. Sandefur, and D.H. Weinberg (Eds), Confronting Poverty: Prescriptions for Change. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts.
  4. Medoff, Peter and Holly Sklar (1994). Streets of Hope: The Fall and Rise of an Urban Neighborhood, South End Press, Boston, Massachusetts.
  5. Tough, Paul. "The Harlem Project", New York Times Magazine, June 20, 2004, pp. 44-47.
  6. Downs, Anthony (1994). New Visions for Metropolitan America. The Brookings Institution, Washington, D.C. and Lincoln Institute of Land Policy, Cambridge, Massachusetts.
  7. Goldsmith, William and Edward Blakely (1992). Separate Societies: Poverty and Inequality in U.S. Cities. Temple University Press, Philadelphia.
  8. Lehman, Jeffrey (1994). Updating Urban Policy. In S. H. Danziger, G.D. Sandefur, and D.H. Weinberg (Eds), Confronting Poverty: Prescriptions for Change. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts.
  9. Murnane, Richard (1994). Education and the Well-Being fo the Next Generation. In S.H. danziger, G.D. Sandefur, and D.H. Weinberg (Eds), Confronting Poverty: Prescriptions for Change. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts.
  10. Schorr, Lisbeth and Daniel Schorr (1988) Within Our reach: Breaking the Cycle of Disadvantage. Doubleday, New York.
  11. Garfinkel, Irwin and Sara McLanahan (1994). Single-Mother Families, Economic Insecurity, and Government Policy. In S.H. Danziger, G.D. Sandefur, and D. H. Weinberg (Eds), Confronting Poverty: Prescriptions for Change. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts.

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