Same City, Different Worlds
- 1 September 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Urban Affairs Quarterly
- Vol. 21 (1) , 66-86
- https://doi.org/10.1177/004208168502100107
Abstract
Studies of residential location typically have treated the household unit as an undifferentiated whole and have not accounted for divergent needs and desires between male and female household members. Using the factorial survey technique, this article examines different preferences for neighborhood characteristics between men and women, focusing on women with varying family and labor market responsibilities. Based on a sample of 177 Syracuse, New York, metropolitan residents, this article shows the desires of men, housewives, single women, and employed women for varying combinations of neighborhood attributes. Findings show that men's desires for neighborhoods suit them well for the typical suburb, whereas women's desired neighborhood characteristics are found both in suburbs and in central cities. Women expressed contradictory desires, wanting the density, residential homogeneity, and racial and socio-economic composition of suburbs, but with the diversity and proximity of services found in cities. These findings suggest that for women suburbs need to include higher densities, public services, and transportation, but should retain much of their residential ambience.Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Why Women Work Closer to HomeUrban Studies, 1981
- Spatial Implications of Increases in the Female Labor Force: A Theoretical and Empirical SynthesisLand Economics, 1980
- Charlotte Perkins Gilman and the Kitchen HouseRadical History Review, 1979
- A MODEL OF RESIDENTIAL LOCATION CHOICE AND COMMUTING BY MEN AND WOMEN WORKERSJournal of Regional Science, 1977