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Title: GEOG 2003: Methods in Human Geography Census Analysis


1
GEOG 2003 Methods in Human GeographyCensus
Analysis
  • Jürgen Essletzbichler
  • (j.essletzbichler_at_geog.ucl.ac.uk)
  • http//www.geog.ucl.ac.uk/jessletzbichler/geog200
    3

2
Overview
  • Continue with course work topics
  • Continue thinking about research questions
  • Use CASWEB to uncover more complex relationships
    and ask more sophisticated research questions

3
General goals
  • How to proceed?
  • what is the issue define your research
    questions?
  • what is current status using Census data?
  • describe current geographical patterns (e.g.
    spatial concentration, unevenness, etc)
  • how are things changing? what is being done?
  • what are strengths and weakness? how could this
    be explored with other methods

4
Useful London ideas sources
  • present the official style of analysis on
    current social problems through broadly
    quantitative approaches

http//www.statistics.gov.uk/downloads/ theme_comp
endia/FOL2003/00Prelims.pdf
http//www.london.gov.uk/mayor/strategies/sds/lond
on_plan/lon_plan_all.pdf
5
Employment topic
  • Focus on London, 2003, The service sector
    dominates Londons economy. Key services among
    the sector are finance and business services, the
    public sector, tourism and hospitality and the
    creative and cultural industries. Finance and
    business services alone accounted for 35 per cent
    of Londons Gross Value Added (GVA) in 1998.
  • Focus on London 2003, chapter 6 labour markets
  • A key concern is changing patterns employment
  • Social-spatial patterns in unemployment,
    especially long-term unemployment.
  • Ethnic and gender differences in occupation,
    unemployment, etc.?

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  • http//www.london.gov.uk/gla/publications/factsand
    figures/DMAG-briefing202003-26.pdf

8
Unemployment rates
  • Pronounced spatial variation
  • Ward unemployment rates in London vary widely
    from 2.2 per cent in Nonsuch ward (Sutton) up to
    17.5 per cent in Bromley-by-Bow ward (Tower
    Hamlets).
  • The level of variation in rates within some
    boroughs is considerable. For example,within
    Kensington and Chelsea, unemployment rates in
    Golborne ward (16.5 per cent) are four times
    higher than in Campden ward (3.8 per cent).
  • In some boroughs such as Newham and Hackney,
    unemployment levels across all wards are
    consistently high. In these two boroughs, all
    wards have unemployment rates lying between 9.4
    and 16.1 per cent.
  • Almost one in five (18 per cent) of Londons
    wards have unemployment rates of ten per cent or
    more most of these are in Inner London where
    38 per cent of wards have unemployment rates of
    ten per cent or more.
  • Nearly two thirds (62 per cent) of Londons wards
    have rates above the national average of 5.2 per
    cent. The majority of wards in Inner London (89
    per cent of wards) have rates above the national
    average.
  • While unemployment rates are low in Outer London
    relative to Inner London, it still has pockets of
    high unemployment four per cent of wards in
    Outer London had rates of 10 per cent. 45 per
    cent of all Outer London wards had unemployment
    rates above the national average of 5.2 per cent.

9
  • A GLA research paper provides overview of
    complexities of measuring unemployment
  • Can get very different answers depending on the
    measurement used
  • Number of Londoners who are unemployed can range
    from 150,000 up to 580,000 depending on how
    narrowly or widely you define unemployment

http//www.london.gov.uk/gla/publications/factsand
figures/DMAG-Briefing202004-9.pdf
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Ethnicity and Identity theme
  • Focus on London 2003 Over 300 languages are
    spoken and the 2001 Census shows that 29 per cent
    of Londons population belonged to a minority
    ethnic group. London has an unrivalled cultural
    and artistic heritage, helping to confirm its
    place as one of the most vibrant and dynamic
    cities in the world.
  • London is unique. The non-White population of
    the UK is concentrated in the large urban
    centres. Nearly half (45 per cent) lived in the
    London region in 2001, where they comprised 29
    per cent of all residents.
  • Ethnicity is often used as explanatory for in
    social disadvantage.
  • But ethnicity is not the cause

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  • what is the geography of religion in London?

15
Education
  • What are implications for London?
  • Focus on London 2003, chapter 7 education and
    training

16
Spatial patterns of educational attainment
Percent of people with no qualification
  • Percent of people with no/some/lots of
    qualifications
  • Ethnic / gender differences
  • Relationship to unemployment / health?

Source Census 2001, Qualifications and Students
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Wealth, poverty inequality
  • The BIG issue one in some senses MORE DETAIL in
    lecture 8 slides
  • Research to understand patterns of social
    difference and trying to explain the processes
    driving inequalities
  • Much of government intervention across all manner
    of policy areas (health, taxation, education,
    criminal justice) is about dealing with impacts
    of inequalities and trying to reduce poverty in
    the future
  • Ideological issues on the inevitability of
    inequality in society.
  • Is is necessary, even beneficial, in a capitalist
    system to differentiate people? Isnt it right
    that more talented, hardworking people are
    entitled to be richer? Is it the case that more
    hardworking people are richer (think about the
    illegal immigrants working 14 hour days)? Should
    society let less able people fail?
  • But how far is it really a meritocracy?
  • Hot political issue
  • Related to all other kinds of issues (health,
    education, ethnicity, housing, )

19
Extreme levels of inequality in London
20
Wealth poverty in London
  • Focus on London 2003, Whilst London stands out
    as one of the most successful regions in the UK,
    it is also a city divided between the extremes of
    wealth creation and success, and deprivation and
    social exclusion. This is reflected in the high
    proportion of wards (20 per cent) which are in
    the 10 per cent most deprived wards in England.
  • What are the patterns of deprivation across
    London?
  • Is inequality increasing? Greater social
    polarisation? Is this reflected spatially? What
    are the implications? What can be done?
  • How does London compare to the rest of the UK? Is
    it a special case? Focus on London 2003,
    Unemployment in London is higher than the
    national average. The Inner London rate is twice
    the national average and rates are particularly
    high among Londons minority ethnic groups.
  • But large variation among ethnic groups,
    inner-outer London, WHY?

21
  • London Divided Income Inequality and Poverty in
    the Capital (GLA, Nov. 2003)
  • http//www.london.gov.uk/mayor/economy/docs/london
    _divided_all.pdf
  • Does not use the Census as a data source. Why?
  • Largely benefit data (routine administration)
  • ONS sample national surveys
  • The issue Once housing costs are taken into
    account, 41 per cent of children in London are
    living in income poverty, the highest rate in
    Great Britain. In Inner London, this rises to one
    in two children. Poverty rates for working age
    adults and pensioners are also far higher in
    Inner London than in any region of Great Britain.
    Shockingly, 36 per cent of Inner London
    pensioners are living in poverty, compared to
  • 25 per cent nationally.

22
Broad policy agenda as set out in The London Plan
(p. 310) to solve inequalities
23
Measuring wealth and poverty
  • Many practical difficulties in accurately
    measuring the wealth / poverty of individual,
    households and areas
  • Material poverty and wealth in terms of income is
    known for most people (tax records, benefit
    claimant records)
  • Can collapse the other 5 topics into broader
    deprivation explanation. for example, health
    inequalities are often believed to be significant
    element in overall deprivation
  • Background reading
  • Focus on London, 2003, chapter 8 living in
    London
  • Lee P, (1999) "Where are the deprived? Measuring
    deprivation in cities and regions" in Dorling D,
    Simpson S, (eds) Statistics in Society The
    Arithmetic of Politics (Arnold, London), pp.
    172-180. Senate House Library, SOCIOLOGY 6th
    Flr, K45 Sta
  • MORE ON THAT NEXT TUESDAY

24
  • The Census has no direct question on poverty or
    income
  • Several possible proxies - car ownership, house
    size (no rooms per person), occupation (social
    class), unemployment, deprivation indices

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Reading Official Statistical reports
  • Useful to read Focus on London and GLA reports
    for their style, format and modes of analysis and
    data presentation
  • These are professionally produced as a means to
    describe social situations and drive official
    action
  • They are key element of discourses of social
    geography
  • The quality of brief descriptions and clear
    analysis and presentation are what you should be
    aiming for in your dissertations
  • Blending together text, charts and small tables
    to build a convincing arguments. statistics are
    tactically deployed to demonstrate understanding
    and give authority (numbers never lie)
  • Full supporting tables in the appendices

27
Case study Ethnicity Employment
  • Ethnic minority unemployment and spatial
    mismatch the case of London, Urban Studies, 1999
  • author Edward Fieldhouse, University of
    Manchester
  • Research Questions context of the validity of
    spatial mismatch theory to explain the high
    unemployment level of ethnic minorities
  • investigate the effect on unemployment of the
    geographical distribution of ethnic minorities
    within Greater London
  • Data Sources 1991 Census, London wards.
    acknowledges limits due to undercount, but argues
    Census remains the most complete and reliable
    data source on minority ethnic populations in
    Britain

28
Ethnicity and employment (Fieldhouse)
  • Analytical Methods Descriptive statistics on
    social patterns of unemployment in ethnic groups
    and by social characteristics (especially housing
    tenure),
  • logistic regression modelling and summary tables
  • numerous thematic maps of spatial patterns
  • Results Overall, although the geography of
    unemployment is not co-terminous with the
    geography of ethnicity, there is a very high
    degree of similarity, in particular the
    inner-outer pattern, and the coincidence of
    unemployment and minority ethnic populations to
    the north-east and the south of the City of
    London.
  • whilst this research has demonstrated a clear
    relationship between minority ethnic unemployment
    and the characteristics of areas in which
    minorities live, there is no evidence that this
    is a product of the spatial mismatch of people
    and jobs.
  • most plausible that this results from a
    combination of the residential segregation of the
    most vulnerable groups

29
Combining poverty, ethnicity and education
  • You want to establish causal relationships
  • Example
  • Why are certain ethnic groups, on average, poorer
    than others?
  • Hypothesis 1 They are unable to obtain jobs
  • Hypothesis 2 They cannot obtain those jobs
    because they are less educated
  • Hypothesis 3 Some ethnic minorities are not able
    to obtain access to education
  • Hypothesis 4 Ethnic minorities in different
    areas have different educational attainment
    (there is a social as well as spatial component
    to educational attainment)
  • Try to answer/explain hypotheses

30
Ethnicity and unemployment
31
Percent of people with no qualifications and
percent Bengali
no qualifications Bengali
32
Correlation is positive, but relationship looks
rather weak Why is that???
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Use Casweb for cross-tabulations
http//census.ac.uk/casweb/
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Variable code in Excel Table matches code in
CASWEB table tt0130681 means Casweb table tt013
(ethnicity) and cell 0681 (all people in London
with no qualifications)
47
Then create the percentages you are interested in
48
CASWEB options
  • Lots of cross-tabulations possible
  • From London to CASWARD level (if you want to
    compare individual wards, etc.)
  • Will help you to establish causal relations

49
Case study A divided nation?
  • A nation still dividing the British census and
    social polarisation 1971-2001, Environment and
    Planning A, 2003
  • authors Danny Dorling, Phil Rees, University of
    Leeds
  • Research Questions calculate the degree to which
    British society has geographically polarised over
    time by various social characteristics (status,
    occupation, tenure, etc)
  • some of the first analysis using newly released
    2001 Census data
  • ideological position that socio-spatial
    polarisation is bad as it implies segregation
    and, to some degree, discrimination
  • Data Source all census data. access to all the
    digital censuses - 1971, 81, 91, 2001. key
    statistic tables for 2001 Census
  • scale is limited to local authorities (406).
    quite crude, especially compared to our ward
    analysis (only 33 LA in London, versus 650 wards)
  • important methodological developments in linking
    through time

50
A divided nation? Dorling et al. 2003
  • Analytical methods develop their own metric of
    segregation which they call index of
    dissimilarity, the proportion of people or
    households who would have to move home, across
    local authority boundaries, were that group to be
    equally represented everywhere.
  • empirically driven, largely descriptive narrative
    with data tables
  • Results runs through large range of social
    characteristics commenting on the trends in
    polarisation
  • white flight, all we can say here is that
    between local authorities the segregation between
    White and all others is growing. All other ethnic
    groups have become more geographically mixed
  • tenure, the only tenure to have polarised
    geographically is council housing.
  • car ownership. Only no car HHs increased,
    ..again there are signs that another group of
    households in Britain, are almost literally,
    being left behind.
  • unfortunately, there is no evidence on income
    polarisation as this is missing from the census

51
Conclusion of study
  • it does turn out that, in the end, Margaret
    Thatcher retains her status as being the prime
    minister who presided over a country pulling
    itself apart faster than before or after. What
    matter most now is that it kept pulling itself
    apart almost as quickly in the decade that follow
    her.
  • New Labour is not making much different
  • underlying drivers of increased mobility for
    larger sections of the population. choosing to
    segregate
  • heading towards an American model - the land of
    cars and social division
  • What we have report here simply widens the
    social gaps between different people living in
    different places. Fundamentally the human
    geography of Britain may be little altered, just
    made yet more stark.
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