Academic literature on the topic 'Established neighborhood'

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Journal articles on the topic "Established neighborhood"

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Mair, Christine, Amanda Lehning, Nicole Mattocks, et al. "NEIGHBORHOOD ENVIRONMENTS AND OBESITY: EXPLORING PATHWAYS TO RISK OF CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE." Innovation in Aging 3, Supplement_1 (2019): S64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igz038.246.

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Abstract Modifying neighborhood environments to target well-established risk factors for cardiovascular disease may reduce health disparities by complementing clinical services. Prior research, however, includes limited measures of neighborhoods and does not adequately account for individual-level processes known to mediate health outcomes. We combine baseline data from the Healthy Aging in Neighborhoods of Diversity Across the Life Span (HANDLS) dataset with neighborhood-level data to yield a diverse sample of Black and white middle-aged and older residents of Baltimore City (N=2707). We use
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Rote, Sunshine M., Jacqueline L. Angel, and Kyriakos Markides. "Neighborhood Context, Dementia Severity, and Mexican American Caregiver Well-Being." Journal of Aging and Health 29, no. 6 (2017): 1039–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0898264317707141.

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Objective: The current study extends research on Latino caregiving to describe the role of neighborhood-level factors and dementia severity for caregiver well-being. Method: Data are drawn from the Hispanic Established Population for the Epidemiologic Study of the Elderly (HEPESE 2010/2011, N = 343). We present regression analyses that describe the relationship between dementia severity in the older care recipient and neighborhood-level structural factors for caregiver mental health. Results: Mexican Americans providing care in neighborhoods characterized by a higher percent Latino report fewe
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Tran, Van C. "Second-Generation Contextual Mobility: Neighborhood Attainment from Birth to Young Adulthood in the United States." International Migration Review 54, no. 2 (2019): 356–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0197918319832235.

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This article examines trajectories of neighborhood mobility for the post-1965 second generation in the United States. It advances the concept of second-generation contextual mobility, defined as the change in neighborhood context over the life course among the second generation. This analysis uses unique geocoded longitudinal data over three decades to documents patterns of second-generation neighborhood attainment. Compared to US blacks, the second generation has achieved significant contextual mobility both over time and across generations. Specifically, the second generation in this New Yor
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Martin, Deborah G., and Steven R. Holloway. "Organizing Diversity: Scales of Demographic Change and Neighborhood Organizing in St Paul, MN." Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space 37, no. 6 (2005): 1091–112. http://dx.doi.org/10.1068/a36142.

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Neighborhood involvement in urban governance remains a pressing goal in an era of globalization. Cities have instituted a variety of structures to facilitate this involvement, including quasi-formal neighborhood or district councils. At the same time, urban populations are changing rapidly because of multiple dynamics operating at multiple scales. Immigration, for example, continues to transform inner-city neighborhoods despite the emergence of suburban immigrant enclaves. Existing research inadequately addresses the interaction between efforts to organize neighborhood political involvement an
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Li, Yuekang, and Yi Wang. "NEIGHBORHOOD AND HEALTH AMONG CHINESE ADULTS: BEYOND THE URBAN AND RURAL DICHOTOMY." Innovation in Aging 3, Supplement_1 (2019): S78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igz038.304.

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Abstract The associations between physical frailty and depressive symptoms among older individuals were established in existing literature. Taking the person-environment perspective, we argue that neighborhood environment could either buffer the stress derived from being physically vulnerable or worsen it by adding another layer of stressors in the environmental context when physical health declined. The objectives of this study are to explore 1) to what extent the neighborhood-level characteristics moderate the relationship between physical frailty and depressive symptoms, 2) if there were ru
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Ziebarth, Dan. "Mixed-income green housing in St George, Staten Island." Local Economy: The Journal of the Local Economy Policy Unit 33, no. 1 (2018): 110–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0269094217753100.

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This proposal sets out to find which policy measure pertaining to affordable housing would be most successful in revitalizing the St George neighborhood on Staten Island. St George has dealt with issues such as a lagging commercial district, difficulty drawing people to the neighborhood, homelessness, and a stagnant housing market. The emergence of affordable green housing units, mixed-income housing developments, and community-based initiatives focused on urban neighborhoods have become increasingly successful pieces in economic and infrastructural development throughout major urban areas. Th
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SÖNMEZ, Filiz, Hatice DOĞAN, and Okan KARAKAŞ. "UNDERSTANDING THE FEVZI ÇAKMAK NEIGHBORHOOD: THROUGH ITS PAST, PRESENT AND PLANNED TOMORROW." IEDSR Association 6, no. 11 (2021): 365–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.46872/pj.251.

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Mahalle is a place name derived from the Arabic roots halel and hulul, meaning “to land, to settle down” (Turkish Dictionary, 1998). In addition to the residential structures within a neighborhood, it has a mosque, primary school, fountain, baths, a grocery store, bakery, parks, etc. It is the smallest settlement in a city. On the other hand, socially a neighborhood refers to a community that is placed somewhere and has organizational relationships. The neighborhood phenomenon is one of the most important legacies that continue from the Ottoman Empire to the Republic. During the Republican per
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Farrell, Chelsea. "Exploring the Overlap Between Sexual Victimization and Offending Among Young Women Across Neighborhoods: Does the Type of Force and Type of Offending Matter?" Journal of Interpersonal Violence 35, no. 3-4 (2017): 571–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0886260516689778.

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The relationship between victimization and subsequent maladaptive behaviors such as offending is well established. To a lesser degree, a contextual lens has been used to examine how neighborhood characteristics influence the overlap between victimization and offending. The existing literature has yet to explore how the neighborhood context moderates the victim–offender overlap among young women, specifically, or whether the type of force used during sexual victimization or offending matters. This study uses data from The National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health) to
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Ramli, Razamin, Siti Nurin Ima Ahmad, Syariza Abdul-Rahman, and Antoni Wibowo. "A tabu search approach with embedded nurse preferences for solving nurse rostering problem." International Journal for Simulation and Multidisciplinary Design Optimization 11 (2020): 10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/smdo/2020002.

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This paper presents an intelligent tabu search (TS) approach for solving a complex real-world nurse rostering problem (NRP). Previous study has suggested that improvement on neighborhoods and smart intensification of a TS could produce faster and fitted solution. In order to enhance the TS, this paper introduces an improvement to the neighborhoods and explores on the neighborhoods exploitations of TS to solve the NRP. The methodology consists of two phases: initialization and neighborhood. The semi-random initialization is employed for finding a good initial solution during the initialization
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Emerson, Kerstin G., Anqi Pan, Hanwen Huang, and Kyriakos Markides. "HEALTHY LIFE EXPECTANCY OF OLDER HISPANICS: THE INFLUENCE OF NEIGHBORHOOD CHARACTERISTICS." Innovation in Aging 3, Supplement_1 (2019): S715—S716. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igz038.2625.

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Abstract Research consistently shows a survival advantage among Hispanics, despite a worse health profile. The goal of this study was to calculate disability free life expectancy for older Hispanics in the United States, and to explore any difference by neighborhoods. We used data from the Wave 5 (2004-5) of the Hispanic Established Population for the Epidemiological Study of the Elderly (Hispanic EPESE), linked to vital status data through 2016. We used Sullivan’s method to create disability free life expectancy (DFLE) estimates, and to calculate the ratio of life expectancy without disabilit
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Established neighborhood"

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Beckham, Leiasa 1971. "Transitional neighborhoods : between the central business and established residential districts : Bay Village, a case study." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2002. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/64559.

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Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Urban Studies and Planning, 2002.<br>Includes bibliographical references (p. 49).<br>"Transitional neighborhoods" had been traditionally viewed as areas that do not have much value to the urban fabric. Given that popular opinion, how have some of these neighborhoods survived the Central Business District expansion and Urban Renewal? Bay Village in Boston, Massachusetts is a prime example of a neighborhood that has withstood the development pressures of the downtown. In this thesis, I will examine how this neighborhood has survived
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Leval, Delilah Zoe. "Cost-benefit Analysis of Greening an Older Modest-sized Home." DigitalCommons@CalPoly, 2010. https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/theses/393.

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This professional project estimates the upfront costs and utility savings expected from greening an approximately 1,100 square foot home built in the 1950s in the San Francisco Bay Area. Two sets of upgrades (alternative and original) were compared for costs and benefits. The alternative set (which included ceiling insulation and omitted upgrading to dual-pane windows) clearly out performed the original set. The alternative set would be expected to reduce resident utility bills by 28% annually, and to prevent approximately 2,700 lbs of carbon dioxide emissions annually. The water efficiency up
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van, Ellenberg Paul. "Aging in Place: Evolving Architecture for an Aging Population within Established Inner City Neighborhoods in Calgary." 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/10222/13320.

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This thesis examines how current demographics and evolving family dynamics act as a catalyst for the evolution of a building in response to how the elderly can successfully age in place. Through the design of a residential building in an inner city neighborhood of Calgary, Alberta, this thesis explores the potential for architecture to accommodate diverse families (such as singles, couples, single parent families, and the elderly) in one development, maintaining existing relationships, promoting social cohesiveness, and providing an informal network of support for the elderly. Th
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Lo, May-Jane, and 羅梅珍. "Leader、Organization Establish and Organization Disintegrate:The Case of Neighborhood Watch Patrol in Fa-Hua Borough of Tainan." Thesis, 2004. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/63745656785043668497.

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碩士<br>國立成功大學<br>政治經濟學研究所<br>92<br>Articles in our local research journals on Neighborhood Watch Patrol have focused mainly on its role, importance and how it is operated and established. There has never been any comprehensive study on one single neighborhood watch patrol from its establishment to the termination. In this study, we took an individual case of once a large neighborhood watch patrol which was operated for a period of ten years as a research subject, in an attempt to gather some insights towards its termination. This information would hopefully be helpful in the future in establ
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Books on the topic "Established neighborhood"

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Authority, Boston Redevelopment. Request authorization to establish the neighborhood planning initiative. 1986.

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Lin, Jan. Taking Back the Boulevard. NYU Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.18574/nyu/9781479809806.001.0001.

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Taking Back the Boulevard tells the story of Northeast Los Angeles known popularly for historic Arts and Crafts architecture, bohemian cultural life, independent small businesses, immigrant diversity and quality of life on its boulevards. It chronicles the initial emergence of these prototypical LA streetcar suburbs and the Arroyo Culture bohemia, then disinvestment with growth of mid-20<sup>th</sup> century freeway suburbs and white flight with residential succession by incoming Latin American and Asian immigrants. Neighborhood revitalization followed through a Latino/a arts renaissance and A
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Highley, Christopher. Theatre, Church, and Neighbourhood in the Early Modern Blackfriars. Edited by Malcolm Smuts. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199660841.013.35.

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This chapter examines the relationship between theater and church in the early modern London parish of St. Anne, Blackfriars. From the 1580s, the parish of St Anne gained notoriety for its Puritan ministers and residents. For a brief period in the 1590s, these godly forces prevented Burbage, Shakespeare, and their fellows from opening a new indoor theater in part of the old Dominican monastery. But eventually the theatre opened and a culture of performing and playgoing became a well-established part of the local life. By looking closely at the individuals involved and at the social and economi
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Moralee, Jason. Christianity, the Capitoline Hill, and the End of Antiquity. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190492274.003.0004.

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Chapter 3 continues to explore the social worlds of the Capitoline Hill by focusing on the Christian cultures of the streets around the Capitoline Hill and the ways in which this iconic place was valued locally from the last half of the sixth century to the middle of the eighth. By the middle of the sixth century, legends began to circulate in Byzantium that made the Capitoline Hill the location of oracles presaging the birth of the savior and the apocalypse. As in other locales in Rome, it was at this time that a small church was established on the Capitoline Hill in an urban environment in w
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Bruce, Tricia Colleen. Boundaries. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190270315.003.0003.

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Personal parishes are established on the basis of a shared identity or purpose, not on the basis of shared neighborhood. They have no territorial boundaries apart from that of the diocese. Personal parishes’ presence alongside territorial parishes, therefore, raises questions about exactly how parish boundaries work, if they work, and why they continue to exist. American Catholics are increasingly mobile in their local religious practice, crossing boundaries to worship where they feel at home. This chapter argues that personal parishes resolve an institutional tension: Catholicism’s tradition
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Guzmán, Will. Marshall, Texas, 1883–1909. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252038921.003.0002.

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This chapter presents a historical analysis of Nixon's character and his formative years growing up in the racially charged South. He was born on February 9, 1883, to Jennie Valerie Engledow and Charles Blanton Nixon in Marshall, Texas, as the eldest of five. Charles Nixon was employed by the Texas and Pacific Railway Company, which eventually enabled his son to spend his childhood within a diverse neighborhood in New Orleans. His childhood also coincided with a period of social and political unrest, during which time race relations had dramatically deteriorated. Notwithstanding the political
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Altunışık, Meliha Benli. Turkey’s Soft Power in a Comparative Context. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190673604.003.0007.

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This chapter focuses on the soft power of Turkey, comparing its engagements with the states of the South Caucasus (and Central Asia) to the countries of the Middle East. The chapter argues that for Turkey, the use of soft power was a tool to re-establish relations with, and acquire acceptance in, its neighborhood. In the case of the South Caucasus, Turkey attempted to reconnect with a region that it was cut off from for a long time due to the Soviet era and the Cold War. In the Middle East, there was an effort to redefine its engagement after a decade of securitization of its foreign policy in
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Gold, Roberta. “Territorio Libre”. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252038181.003.0007.

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This chapter examines the work of young radicals in the Black Panthers, Young Lords Party, student left, and lower-profile neighborhood groups who sought to establish community say over housing during the Vietnam War period. It first provides an overview of ghetto radicalism in the late 1960s before turning to school activism and the involvement of women radicals in the housing struggle under the banner of community control. It then considers the emergence of the squatter movement, along with the squatter actions launched by young radicals in collaboration with older activists in an attempt to
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Clarke-Doane, Justin. Morality and Mathematics. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198823667.001.0001.

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This book explores arguments for and against moral realism and mathematical realism, how they interact, and what they can tell us about areas of philosophical interest more generally. It argues that our mathematical beliefs have no better claim to being self-evident or provable than our moral beliefs. Nor do our mathematical beliefs have better claim to being empirically justified. It is also incorrect that reflection on the “genealogy” of our moral beliefs establishes a lack of parity between the cases. In general, if one is a moral anti-realist on the basis of epistemological considerations
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Bruce, Tricia Colleen. Parish and Place. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190270315.001.0001.

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The Catholic Church stands at the forefront of an emergent majority-minority America. Parish and Place tells the story of how the largest US religion is responding at the local level to unprecedented cultural, racial, linguistic, ideological, and political diversification among American Catholics. Specifically, it explores bishops’ use of personal parishes—parishes formally established not on the basis of territory, but purpose. Today’s personal parishes serve an array of Catholics drawn together by shared identities and preferences rather than shared neighborhoods. Their contemporary applicat
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Book chapters on the topic "Established neighborhood"

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Miles, Sam. "Let’s (not) Go Outside: Grindr, Hybrid Space, and Digital Queer Neighborhoods." In The Life and Afterlife of Gay Neighborhoods. Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-66073-4_9.

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AbstractDevelopments in mobile digital technologies are disrupting conventional understandings of space and place for smartphone users. One way in which location-based media are refiguring previously taken-for-granted spatial traditions is via GPS-enabled online dating and hook-up apps. For sexual minorities, these apps can reconfigure any street, park, bar, or home into a queer space through a potential meeting between mutually attracted individuals, but what does this signify for already-existing queer spaces? This chapter examines how smartphone apps including Grindr, Tinder, and Blued synthesize online queer encounter with offline physical space to create a new hybrid terrain predicated on availability, connection, and encounter. It is also a terrain that can sidestep established gay neighborhoods entirely. I explore how this hybridization impacts on older, physically rooted gay neighborhoods and the role that these neighborhoods have traditionally played in brokering social and sexual connection for sexual minorities. Few would deny that location-based apps have come to play a valuable role in multiplying opportunities for sexual minorities. However, the stratospheric rise of these technologies also provokes questions about their impact on embodied encounter, queer community, and a sense of place. A decade on from Grindr’s release, this chapter evaluates the impact of location-based media on gay spaces and reflects on what the increasing hybridization of online and offline spaces for same-sex encounter might mean for queer lives of the future.
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Krase, Jerome, and Timothy Shortell. "Story-Making and Photography: The Visual Essay and Migration." In IMISCOE Research Series. Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-67608-7_8.

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AbstractIt can be argued that migrants express their own agency, via spatial practices, to change the meanings of the spaces and places they occupy and use. Although they are not the most powerful agents in our glocalized world, they nevertheless sometimes consciously and more often unconsciously, compete with others to visually define their micro-worlds for themselves and, therefore, for more powerful others as well (Krase &amp; Shortell, 2015). Of course, migrants move, but they also settle and can establish more or less permanent enclaves. As students of mid- to large-scale urban change, we focus on commercial neighborhood vernacular landscapes which we argue have the greatest visual impact on observers. As we argue here, special attention should be paid to the visible products of their settlement which are enacted in local vernacular landscapes. For example, markets, places of worship, and even the patterns of dress of people on the street can serve as powerful semiotics or “markers” of change due to migration. It must be noted at the outset that social scientist, like ordinary observers, must avoid the common tendency to essentialize these visible signs that contribute to the problem of stereotyping social groups.
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Lung-Amam, Willow S. "A Quality Education for Whom?" In Trespassers? University of California Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520293892.003.0003.

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This chapter considers how migrants' educational priorities and practices reshaped Silicon Valley neighborhoods and schools. For many Asian American families, high-performing schools have been among the most important factors drawing them to particular communities around the region and to their imagined geography of “good” suburban neighborhoods. The academic culture and practices that Asian Americans introduced in Fremont schools, however, has been met with considerable resistance. A case study of the Mission San Jose neighborhood in Fremont shows that as large numbers of Asian American families moved into the community, primarily for access to its highly ranked schools, many established White families moved out. This pattern of so-called White flight was driven in part by tensions between Asian American and White students and parents over educational values, school culture, and academic competition.
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Barton, Nimisha. "Neighborhood, Street Culture, and Melting-Pot Mixité." In Reproductive Citizens. Cornell University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501749636.003.0006.

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This chapter traces the social histories of migrant communities in Paris that have been attentive to how urban dynamics of mixed residential life eased the assimilation of foreigners into local society. It explains how sex and gender contributed to the formation of cross-cultural solidarities that established urban mixité in working-class neighborhoods of Paris. It also draws on the rich literature that explores gendered urban dynamics among Parisians in the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century capital. The chapter demonstrates how the gendered dynamics of working-class life furnished cross-cultural networks and solidarities that contributed to immigrants' lived experience as reproductive citizens. It describes the tumult of the neighborhoods of Sainte Marguerite and La Roquette, the contiguous Parisian quartiers where foreigners of all national and colonial stripes settled in the first decades of the twentieth century.
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Lemon, Robert. "Community Conflict and Cuisine in Columbus." In The Taco Truck. University of Illinois Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252042454.003.0006.

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Chapter Five looks at the appearance of taco trucks in Columbus, Ohio’s west side in the early 2000s and the progression of the community’s initially negative perception of the trucks to a positive one as the trucks have become a more integral part of the neighborhood. In so doing, the chapter evaluates the ways in which taco trucks have become symbolic of a cultural transgression. The taco truck thus interrupts previous established cultural boundaries of the neighborhood’s spaces and is deemed out of place by the previous community residents. The chapter demonstrates how, through cooking and eating practices that foster conviviality, an immigrant group can culturally redraw social boundaries to redefine culture.
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Thrall, Grant Ian. "Hotel and Motel." In Business Geography and New Real Estate Market Analysis. Oxford University Press, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195076363.003.0012.

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The key concepts, proceeding top-down, for market analysis for the hospitality industry are market segmentation, demand, and supply. Location or trade area comes into the analysis as an umbrella over these three concepts. Market niche and segmentation, demand, and supply are primary determinants to establishing the criteria for locating hospitality facilities. Whenever there have been sufficient numbers of travelers in search of food and shelter, some form of hostelry industry has arisen.1 The Code of Hammurabi (1800 B.C.E) referred to innkeeping (Winfree 1996). In the western countries, as the Romans established an extensive roadway system, taverns and inns followed at strategically spaced locations. The Roman roads were used for military travel, trade and commerce, and pilgrimage and tourism. These are the primary reasons we use roads today. The early inns were largely run by religious orders. However, in Europe, as commerce grew in the fifteenth century, lodging as a commercial activity began to replace innkeeping as a charitable activity. In the American colonial period during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, inns and taverns were an important part of commerce and cultural exchange. These facilities were designed after the inns and taverns of England, which were closely integrated into their communities. Inns and taverns did not intrude or disrupt the neighborhood; instead, they were thought of as being an integral part of the culture and activities of the neighborhood. Architecturally, early inns and taverns conformed to the look and feel of the surrounding neighborhood environment. Survivors of these early inns are the contemporary bed-and-breakfasts (B&amp;Bs). The term hotel arose early in the nineteenth century and was used to distinguish a greater level of commercial activity than an inn. Hotels offered food, drink, retail shopping, and lodging. Hotels were also more intrusive in their neighborhoods. Instead of less than 10 rooms that typified many inns of the era, early hotels contained as many as 200 rooms, and rose to 6 floors in height. Many nineteenth-century hotels were the tallest buildings in town. Thus, the hospitality industry began its first cautious attempts at market segmentation and diversification. Inns remained, but hotels offered an alternative experience via amenity differentiation.
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Talen, Emily. "The Historical Neighborhood and Its Decline." In Neighborhood. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190907495.003.0002.

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This chapter reviews what is known about how neighborhoods were laid out and experienced, before the city was fundamentally restructured by technological and social changes emerging out of the 19th century. To what degree was the neighborhood ever identifiable, serviced, diverse, and connected? Counteracting the often more ambiguous contemporary understanding of neighborhood requires drawing on a broad historical and global perspective. Interconnection, localized identity, human scale, adjacency, access, the need for a graspable spatial unit to belong to—these are the regularities of urban experience that establish a more durable foundation for the traditional concept of neighborhood. Historical examples of neighborhood are important precisely because neighborhood form emerged as a regular feature of urban experience all over the globe, despite profound differences in urbanization processes.
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"Open Works." In American Perspectives on Learning Communities and Opportunities in the Maker Movement. IGI Global, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-8310-3.ch010.

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Open Works is a newly established community-based makerspace in the Greenmount West Neighborhood District of Baltimore, Maryland. The space, located in a completely renovated building especially designed as a makerspace, encompasses 34,000 square feet and has an impressive array of new equipment, specialty shops, public spaces, and 140 micro-studios for creatives and entrepreneurs in the community. Open Works offers a variety of face-to-face courses to certify makers in five out of the seven studio spaces and relies heavily on the six full-time staff and fellows to run the space. Open Works is grappling with the need to increase paid memberships as a mechanism for sustainability and at the same time trying to meet the needs of a disadvantaged community. This chapter explores Open Works.
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Diaz, Ella. "The Art of Afro-Latina Consciousness-Raising in Shadowshaper." In Nerds, Goths, Geeks, and Freaks. University Press of Mississippi, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.14325/mississippi/9781496827456.003.0007.

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Drawing on popular trends of zombies, magic, and superheroes in young adult fiction and blockbuster film franchises, author Daniel José Older presents Sierra Santiago, an Afro-Latina hero in Shadowshaper (2015) who combats local forces of cultural appropriation and gentrification in her Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York. This chapter focuses on the critical role of street art in her analysis of Shadowshaper and, specifically, the community muralists that, in the late twentieth century, established urban spaces as Latina/o and Chicana/o barrios. By positioning Sierra at the center of community muralism, Older disrupts the absence of Latina/o artists and, particularly female artists, by foregrounding moments of artistic processes throughout the novel, including descriptions of Sierra’s stream of consciousness as she makes art that reflects Afro-Latinidad.
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Padoongpatt, Mark. "“More Than a Place of Worship”." In Flavors of Empire. University of California Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520293731.003.0005.

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This chapter examines food festivals at the Wat Thai of Los Angeles, the first and largest Thai Buddhist temple in the nation, which was established in 1979, as a window on the relationship between food, race, and place in the suburbs during the 1980s. It charts Thai American suburbanization in the East San Fernando Valley near Wat Thai and traces the history of the temple, including how it evolved into a community space that became popular for its weekend food festivals. The festivals, which attracted thousands of visitors, fostered a public-oriented Thai American suburban culture that was a claim for a "right to the global city." The festivals, however, sparked complaints from a group of nearby residents, who used zoning laws to try to shut them down. The chapter contends that the residents who opposed the festivals articulated a liberal multiculturalism to maintain the white spatial imaginary of the neighborhood.
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Conference papers on the topic "Established neighborhood"

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Domingos, Gabriel B., Igor Lovatto, Matheus Takata, and Marcelo Manzato. "Exploring temporal contexts for neighborhood-based models in Session-Based Recommender Systems." In XXV Simpósio Brasileiro de Sistemas Multimídia e Web. Sociedade Brasileira de Computação - SBC, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5753/webmedia_estendido.2019.8136.

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Recent works in the field of Recommender Systems have focused in making recommendations using only information about accessed items in an active user session, since the user’s preferences can be very specific to the context of the session. Despite the increasing interest in deep neural network models in the Recommender Systems in general, simpler models, such as neighborhood-based collaborative filtering ones, have been outperforming these more complex models in the session-based scenario. However, in order to soften known scalability problems in neighborhood-based models, sampling strategies
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Mavrakos, Spyridon A., Ioannis K. Chatjigeorgiou, and Dimitra M. Lentziou. "Wave Run-Up and Second-Order Wave Forces on a Truncated Circular Cylinder Due to Monochromatic Waves." In ASME 2005 24th International Conference on Offshore Mechanics and Arctic Engineering. ASMEDC, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/omae2005-67104.

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The second-order diffraction potential around a truncated cylinder is considered. The solution method is based on a semi-analytical formulation for the double frequency diffraction potential. The later is properly decomposed into three components in order to satisfy all boundary conditions involved in the problem. The solution process results in a Sturm-Liouville problem for the ring-shaped outer fluid region, which is defined by the geometry of the structure. The matching of the potentials along the boundaries of neighborhood fluid regions is established with the aid of the ‘free’ wave compon
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Lina, Al Eassa. "FOSTERING RESILIENCE IN THE AFTERMATH OF THE 2015 EUROPEAN NEIGHBORHOOD POLICY REVIEW׃ EVIDENCE FROM JORDAN." In NORDSCI International Conference. SAIMA Consult Ltd, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.32008/nordsci2020/b2/v3/13.

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Resilience has become a priority for the EU in its 2015 European Neighborhood Policy review (ENP), It refers to building state and societal resilience of the Union as a whole, its members and the EU׳s neighbors including Jordan, a strategic southern partner of the EU. In this regard, the EU Building resilience in Jordan in response for crises as the Syrian refugee crisis seems workable but the EU needs to foster it. Thus, this paper’s question is How can the EU foster resilience after it has become a priority in its 2015 (ENP) review in case of Jordan? While many scholars like David Chandler a
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Lall, Pradeep, Jinesh Narangaparambil, Ved Soni, and Scott Miller. "Development of Process-Recipes for Multi-Layer Circuitry Printing With Z-Axis Interconnects Using Aerosol-Jet Nanoparticle Ink." In ASME 2020 International Technical Conference and Exhibition on Packaging and Integration of Electronic and Photonic Microsystems. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/ipack2020-2664.

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Abstract Flexible electronics is a rapid emerging trend in consumer-electronics with ever-increasing applications showing feasibility of functionality with flexibility. Aerosol Jet printing technology has gained rapid acceptance for additive printing owing to non-contact deposition and ability to print on non-planar surfaces. Prior work on aerosol-jet print processes primarily focuses on single-layer printing, taking into account different parameters such as mass flow, line width, sintering conditions, and overspray. Flexible PCBs in complex applications are envisioned to be multi-layered, inv
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Ugirumurera, Juliette, and Zygmunt J. Haas. "Optimal Capacity Sizing for a Completely Green Village With Programmable Appliances." In ASME 2016 10th International Conference on Energy Sustainability collocated with the ASME 2016 Power Conference and the ASME 2016 14th International Conference on Fuel Cell Science, Engineering and Technology. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/es2016-59341.

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Current trends show that renewable energy production costs continue to decrease with time, so that renewable energy sources (RES) are becoming more suitable as electricity sources. In addition to their environmental benefits, RES are especially appropriate for remote areas, where the expansion of existing power grid is impractical and fuel transportation for thermal generators is too expensive. In this regard, our work studies the optimal capacity sizing for a completely green village (CGV), which is an isolated residential microgrid (MG) whose power is entirely generated by RES. In particular
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Guezennec, Yann G., Ta-Young Gabriel Choi, Jeffrey Marusiak, Benjamin Yurkovich, and Woongchul Choi. "Sizing Study and Validation of a Hybridized Fuel Cell NEV With Bi-Directional Grid Inter-Connect for Sustainable Local Transportation." In ASME 2006 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition. ASMEDC, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/imece2006-15338.

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Due to sharply increasing oil price, tremendous efforts are being made to reduce the dependencies on the petroleum based fuels in the field of automotive power trains. As one of the promising alternatives, fuel cell hybrid system has been studied for many different vehicle types from SUV to low speed vehicle. To establish systematic ways to achieve the optimized system configuration, in this paper, we introduce a methodology which combines energy analysis over typical drive cycles with a parametric sizing study for the various powertrain components as well as supervisory energy management para
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Huang, Joe, Donghyun Seo, and Moncef Krarti. "Analysis of the Energy Saving Potentials for Near-Zero Energy Buildings in Shanghai." In ASME 2011 5th International Conference on Energy Sustainability. ASMEDC, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/es2011-54652.

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The Changning District in Shanghai has expressed interest to becoming a green neighborhood and has asked for recommendations on how to reduce the energy usage in public buildings in their district. The objective of this short study is to identify the likely range of further reductions in the energy use and carbon emissions of new buildings through energy-efficiency improvements and the use of renewable energy, i.e., solar hot water (SHW), photovoltaics (PV), and ground-source heat pumps (GSHP), as compared to buildings that meet the current public building energy code in Shanghai. This analysi
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Ruzziconi, Laura, Stefano Lenci, and Mohammad I. Younis. "Nonlinear Phenomena in the Single-Mode Dynamics in an AFM Cantilever Beam." In ASME 2016 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences and Computers and Information in Engineering Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/detc2016-59571.

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This study deals with the nonlinear dynamics arising in an atomic force microscope cantilever beam. After analyzing the static behavior, a single degree of freedom Galerkin reduced order model is introduced, which describes the overall scenario of the structure response in a neighborhood of the primary resonance. Extensive numerical simulations are performed when both the forcing amplitude and frequency are varied, ranging from low up to elevated excitations. The coexistence of competing attractors with different characteristics is analyzed. Both the non-resonant and the resonant behavior are
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Ruiz-Apilánez, Borja, Eloy Solís, Vicente Romero de Ávila, Carmen Alía, Irene García-Camacha, and Raúl Martín. "Spatial distribution of economic activities in heritage cities: The case of the historic city of Toledo, Spain." In 24th ISUF 2017 - City and Territory in the Globalization Age. Universitat Politècnica València, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/isuf2017.2017.5164.

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Spatial distribution of economic activities in heritage cities: The case of the historic city of Toledo, Spain. Borja Ruiz-Apilánez¹, Eloy Solís¹, Vicente Romero de Ávila², Carmen Alía¹ ¹Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha, Escuela de Arquitectura. Avda. Carlos III, s/n ES-45071 Toledo ²Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha. Escuela de Ingenieros de Caminos. Avda. Camilo José Cela, s/n ES-19071 Ciudad Real E-mail: borja.ruizapilanez@uclm.es, eloy.solis@uclm.es, vicente.romeroavila@uclm.es, carmen.alia@alu.uclm.es Keywords (3-5): Urban Economics, Space Syntax, Heritage Cities, Spain Conference topics
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