High-density cities are economically beneficial but lead to greater inequality
By A Mystery Man Writer
Description
Densely built cities with people living and working in close proximity are economically efficient but lead to higher levels of inequality, according to new research from the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE).
Housing and Educational Inequality: The Case of Long Island
Inequality is deliberately built into cities: segregated playgrounds are just the start
Higher Urban Densities Associated with the Worst Housing Affordability
Big city growth escalates the urban-rural divide
Where is the world's densest city?, Cities
Systematic Inequality - Center for American Progress
Gini Index Explained and Gini Coefficients Around the World
Urbanization: expanding opportunities, but deeper divides, UN DESA
Abdelmalek Ben Salah on LinkedIn: High density cities are economically beneficial but lead to greater…
High Density Cities Are Economically Beneficial But Lead To Greater Inequality
PDF) Conclusion
New tool maps out income and racial inequality across Alexandria
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