Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

Personal tools

Spatial Variation in Poverty-Generating Processes: Child Poverty in the United States

Curtis, Katherine J.; Voss, Paul R.; & Long, David D. (2012). Spatial Variation in Poverty-Generating Processes: Child Poverty in the United States. Social Science Research, 41(1), 146-59. NIHMSID: NIHMS318642

Journal Article



Curtis, Katherine J.
Voss, Paul R.
Long, David D.



2012


Social Science Research

41

1

146-59







10.1016/j.ssresearch.2011.07.007


NIHMS318642

5120


This study builds on research demonstrating that sub-regions within the United States have different processes that abet poverty and that child poverty is spatially differentiated. We focus on the social attributes of the local area to assess what the geographic place represents in terms of social characteristics, namely racial/ethnic composition and economic structure, and to resolve apparent inconsistencies in poverty research. Using spatial regime and spatial error regression techniques to analyze county census data, we examine spatial differentiation in the relationships that generate child poverty. Our approach addresses the conceptual and technical aspects of spatial inequality. Results show that local-area processes are at play with implications for more nuanced theoretical models and anti-poverty policies that consider systematic differences in factors contributing to child poverty according to the racial/ethnic and economic contexts.


Place, Space, and Health


Octet Stream icon 5120.ris — Octet Stream, 1 kB (1,375 bytes)

Curtis, Katherine J.; Voss, Paul R.; & Long, David D. (2012). Spatial Variation in Poverty-Generating Processes: Child Poverty in the United States. Social Science Research, 41(1), 146-59. NIHMSID: NIHMS318642