An ethnic group specific deprivation index for measuring neighbourhood inequalities in England and Wales

IF 3.6 3区 社会学 Q1 GEOGRAPHY
Christopher D. Lloyd, Gemma Catney, Richard Wright, Mark Ellis, Nissa Finney, Stephen Jivraj, David Manley, Sarah Wood
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Abstract

The measurement of deprivation for small areas in the UK has provided the basis for the development of policies and targeting of resources aimed at reducing spatial inequalities. Most measures summarise the aggregate level of deprivation across all people in a given area, and no account is taken of differences between people with differing characteristics, such as age, sex or ethnic group. In recognition of the marked inequalities between ethnic groups in the UK, and the distinctive geographies of these inequalities, this paper presents a new ethnic group-specific neighbourhood deprivation measure—the Ethnic Group Deprivation Index (EGDI). This index, using a custom cross-tabulated 2021 Census dataset on employment, housing tenure, education and health by ethnic group, reveals the small area geographies of ethnic inequalities that have to date received scant attention, and yet have profound impacts on life chances and well-being. Drawing on the methodological framework of the widely used English Index of Multiple Deprivation (IMD) and for the same geographies (Lower Layer Super Output Areas), the EGDI measures deprivation for each ethnic group using data from the 2021 Census of England and Wales. The EGDI reveals the complex geographies of ethnic inequality and demonstrates that while one ethnic group in a neighbourhood may have high relative levels of deprivation, another ethnic group in that same neighbourhood may experience very low relative levels. The EGDI explores ethnic inequalities within and between neighbourhoods, complementing and augmenting existing measures by offering an important means of better understanding ethnic inequalities. The EGDI can be used to help shape locally and culturally sensitive policy development and resource allocation.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

衡量英格兰和威尔士社区不平等的特定族裔剥夺指数
对联合王国小地区的贫困情况的衡量为制定旨在减少空间不平等的政策和确定资源目标提供了基础。大多数措施总结了特定地区所有人的总体贫困水平,没有考虑到不同特征的人之间的差异,例如年龄、性别或种族群体。认识到英国各民族之间明显的不平等,以及这些不平等的独特地理位置,本文提出了一种新的针对少数民族群体的邻里剥夺措施——少数民族剥夺指数(EGDI)。该指数使用了2021年人口普查中按族裔群体划分的就业、住房使用权、教育和健康数据表,揭示了少数民族不平等的小区域地理分布,这些不平等迄今为止很少受到关注,但却对生活机会和福祉产生了深远影响。根据广泛使用的英语多重剥夺指数(IMD)的方法框架和同一地理区域(下层超级产出区),EGDI使用2021年英格兰和威尔士人口普查的数据衡量每个种族群体的剥夺情况。EGDI揭示了种族不平等的复杂地理分布,并表明,虽然一个社区中的一个种族群体可能有较高的相对贫困水平,但同一社区的另一个种族群体可能经历非常低的相对贫困水平。EGDI探讨了社区内部和社区之间的种族不平等,通过提供更好地了解种族不平等的重要手段,补充和扩大了现有措施。EGDI可用于帮助制定具有地方和文化敏感性的政策制定和资源分配。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
3.30%
发文量
69
期刊介绍: The Geographical Journal has been the academic journal of the Royal Geographical Society, under the terms of the Royal Charter, since 1893. It publishes papers from across the entire subject of geography, with particular reference to public debates, policy-orientated agendas.
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