Our findings suggest that this socio-spatial inequality is linked to the increasing impacts of climate change. Following this, one important implication of our work is that climate change could exacerbate social inequalities in the wake of extreme weather events, if hard-hit areas are majority-...
Geography History Language and linguistics Politics and international relations Psychology Science, technology and society Social policy Sociology Show more Associative learning via eyeblink conditioning differs by age from infancy to adulthood Learning associations via eyeblink conditioning was strongest in chil...
power relations, identity, status, and control could produce social gradients in health status.;This reading of social geography and its potential intersection with population health finds that housing, a significant factor in the generation of social inequality second only to inequalities arising in ...
Environmental Inequality in the American Mind: The Problem of Color-Blind Environmental Racism Dylan Bugden Despite research showing that public beliefs about the distribution of resources in society is a crucial factor in the reproduction of inequality, we do not know what Americans believe about envi...
the methodologies used to capture racial inequality/oppression, and the level of analysis, all matter for the understanding of racism that activists are able to substantiate. Mobilization’s epistemic approaches provide some activists...
The decision to walk to reach a station of public transport is affected by plenty of urban and demographic characteristics, i.e., the trip’s purpose, the structure of the urban environment, the local geography, and the availability of public transport [53,54]. The most important factor is...
What new bases of order would emerge? What, if anything, would prevent ‘a widely ramifying disorder?’ Would social life even be possible? Scholars who eventually came to be defined as the founders of the disciplines ofsociology, psychology, economics,political science, and even geography, and...
are known, here we account for the anticipated demographic changes likely to occur this century that could substantially compound climate inequality in the U.S. We use sea-level rise as an example of compounding environmental risk to uncover the magnitude of future inequalities. Specifically, we ...
The relatively egalitarian society of the communist years had relinquished its place to economic inequality and an increasingly class-structured society, in which the average income of the upper one-tenth of the Hungarian population was many times that of the lowest tenth. By the mid-1990s the ...
structural historical geography component to deprivation (Fig.4), while mapping its distribution today (Fig.3) confirms its mitigation because of migration and mixing of the population that has taken place over the last 165 years. Migration has mitigated but not eliminated the structural inequality ...