000 01212pab a2200157 454500
008 180718b2002 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aBaum, Scott
245 _aCommunities of the post industrial city
260 _c2002
300 _ap.322-57.
362 _aJan
520 _aThe authors discern the community structure of the postindustrial city, with reference to Australia. They focus empirically on three major types of Australian urban center: urban regions, metropolitan areas that are not part of urban regions, and other major cities. These three account for almost three-quarters of the Australian population. The authors draw on a conceptualization formulated by Marcuse and van Kempen to guide the analysis, with a combination of cluster analysis and discriminant analysis being applied to aggregate (essentially census) data to identify the communities. Nine major Australian urban communities are identified - four are affluent, four are disadvantaged, and one is a working-class community. The communities found, however, differed greatly from those cited in the Marcuse and van Kempen schema. - Reproduced.
650 _aCommunities
773 _aUrban Affairs Review
909 _a52058
999 _c52058
_d52058