数字和社会经济不平等对活动参与的流动性限制:马德里的专属用户

IF 6.1 Q1 GEOGRAPHY
Segundo Paico-Saavedra , Alberto Rojas-Rivero , Raúl F. Elizondo-Candanedo , Aldo Arranz-López , Julio A. Soria-Lara
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引用次数: 0

摘要

尽管人们对COVID-19对流动性的影响进行了广泛研究,往往强调弱势群体承受的不成比例的负担,但有两个方面仍未得到充分研究:对脆弱性采取多维方法的必要性,以及在危机期间,感知而非观察到的流动性限制在影响准入方面的作用。本研究通过调查2019冠状病毒病大流行期间马德里地区的结构性脆弱性(如交通机动性、数字接入和社会经济)如何影响参与工作和教育活动的能力,解决了这一差距。通过对受困公共交通用户的调查,采用主成分分析(PCA)确定脆弱性的关键维度。这些维度与社会经济地位、数字接入、家庭特征和通勤条件有关,然后被纳入有序逻辑回归,以评估它们对感知移动困难的影响。研究结果揭示了一个复杂的、分层的脆弱性地理。远程办公能力有限、数字排斥和经济不稳定的个人更有可能报告行动受限,特别是在交通选择较少的郊区和外围地区。相比之下,那些拥有更多数字接入、财务弹性或私人交通选择的人报告的障碍更少。研究结果强调,如果没有数字和社会不平等,就无法理解与交通有关的不利因素。政策影响包括需要将数字无障碍纳入交通公平框架,改善结构依赖地区的服务提供,并将非正式的家庭一级移动战略视为资产。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Digital and socioeconomic inequalities in perceived mobility restrictions for activity participation: Captive users in Madrid
Although COVID-19′s impact on mobility has been widely studied—often highlighting the disproportionate burden on vulnerable groups—two aspects remain understudied: the need for a multidimensional approach to vulnerability, and the role of perceived rather than observed mobility restrictions in shaping access during crises. This study addresses this gap by investigating how structural vulnerabilities (e.g., transport mobility, digital access, and socioeconomic) shaped the ability to engage in work and educational activities during the COVID-19 pandemic in the Madrid Region. A survey of captive public transport users was conducted, and Principal Component Analysis (PCA) was used to identify key dimensions of vulnerability. These dimensions -related to socioeconomic status, digital access, household characteristics, and commuting conditions- were then included in an ordinal logistic regression to assess their influence on perceived mobility difficulty. The results reveal a complex and layered geography of vulnerability. Individuals with limited teleworking capacity, digital exclusion, and economic precarity were significantly more likely to report mobility restrictions, especially in suburban and peripheral areas with fewer transport alternatives. In contrast, those with greater digital access, financial resilience, or private mobility options reported fewer barriers. The findings emphasize that transport-related disadvantages cannot be understood without digital and social inequalities. Policy implications include the need to integrate digital accessibility into transport equity frameworks, improve service provision in structurally dependent areas, and recognize informal household-level mobility strategies as assets.
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