Title
Spatial mismatch outside of large urban areas: an analysis of welfare recipients in Fresno County, California
Document Type
Working Paper
Publication Date
2003
Subject Area
Location - USA, Population - Unemployed, Transport policy - Transport disadvantage
Abstract
Numerous scholars assert that welfare recipients face a mismatch between their residential locations in inner-city or rural areas where they live far from employment opportunities located in the suburbs. However, the findings of this study bring into question the wholesale application of the spatial mismatch hypothesis to all welfare recipients. Welfare recipients in mid-sized cities such as Fresno, California, do not face spatial barriers to employment since they live in compact areas where distances between residential and employment locations are relatively short. In contrast, job access is important in the non-urbanized areas of Fresno County where welfare recipients who live in job-rich neighbourhoods are more likely to be employed than recipients who are dispersed throughout more isolated, non-urbanized areas.
Recommended Citation
Blumenberg, E, Shiki, K, Spatial mismatch outside of large urban areas: an analysis of welfare recipients in Fresno County, California, UCTC Paper No 655, July, 2003. Published with permission from University of California Transportation Centre.
