A Scientometric Review of Residential Segregation Research: A CiteSpace-Based Visualization
Residential segregation (RS) is a global phenomenon that has become an enduring and important topic in international academic research. In this review, using RS as the search term, 2520 articles from the period 1928–2022 were retrieved from the Scopus database and were visually analyzed using CiteSp...
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MDPI AG
2022
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Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.3390/su15010448 https://doaj.org/article/e61657246840474c82d449a802d48e58 |
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fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:oai:doaj.org/article:e61657246840474c82d449a802d48e58 2023-05-15T16:50:20+02:00 A Scientometric Review of Residential Segregation Research: A CiteSpace-Based Visualization Kaihuai Liao Peiyi Lv Shixiang Wei Tianlan Fu 2022-12-01 https://doi.org/10.3390/su15010448 https://doaj.org/article/e61657246840474c82d449a802d48e58 en eng MDPI AG doi:10.3390/su15010448 2071-1050 https://doaj.org/article/e61657246840474c82d449a802d48e58 undefined Sustainability, Vol 15, Iss 448, p 448 (2022) residential segregation race segregation CiteSpace knowledge mapping socio hisphilso Journal Article https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_6501/ 2022 fttriple https://doi.org/10.3390/su15010448 2023-01-22T19:33:18Z Residential segregation (RS) is a global phenomenon that has become an enduring and important topic in international academic research. In this review, using RS as the search term, 2520 articles from the period 1928–2022 were retrieved from the Scopus database and were visually analyzed using CiteSpace software. The results revealed the following: (1) The United States and its institutions have made outstanding contributions to RS research, while various scholars (e.g., Johnston, Massey, Forrest, Poulsen, and Iceland) have laid the foundation for RS research. (2) Mainstream RS research originates from three fields—psychology, education, and social sciences—while the trend of multidisciplinary integration is constantly increasing. (3) The research hotspots of RS include racial difference, sociospatial behavior, income inequality, mixed income communities, guest worker minorities, typical district segregation, occupational segregation, health inequalities, metropolitan ghetto, and migrant–native differential mobility. Furthermore, (4) gentrification, spatial analysis, school segregation, health disparity, immigrant, and COVID-19 have become new themes and directions of RS research. Future research should pay more attention to the impact of multi-spatial scale changes on RS as well as propose theoretical explanations rooted in local contexts by integrating multidisciplinary theoretical knowledge. Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland Unknown Sustainability 15 1 448 |
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residential segregation race segregation CiteSpace knowledge mapping socio hisphilso |
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residential segregation race segregation CiteSpace knowledge mapping socio hisphilso Kaihuai Liao Peiyi Lv Shixiang Wei Tianlan Fu A Scientometric Review of Residential Segregation Research: A CiteSpace-Based Visualization |
topic_facet |
residential segregation race segregation CiteSpace knowledge mapping socio hisphilso |
description |
Residential segregation (RS) is a global phenomenon that has become an enduring and important topic in international academic research. In this review, using RS as the search term, 2520 articles from the period 1928–2022 were retrieved from the Scopus database and were visually analyzed using CiteSpace software. The results revealed the following: (1) The United States and its institutions have made outstanding contributions to RS research, while various scholars (e.g., Johnston, Massey, Forrest, Poulsen, and Iceland) have laid the foundation for RS research. (2) Mainstream RS research originates from three fields—psychology, education, and social sciences—while the trend of multidisciplinary integration is constantly increasing. (3) The research hotspots of RS include racial difference, sociospatial behavior, income inequality, mixed income communities, guest worker minorities, typical district segregation, occupational segregation, health inequalities, metropolitan ghetto, and migrant–native differential mobility. Furthermore, (4) gentrification, spatial analysis, school segregation, health disparity, immigrant, and COVID-19 have become new themes and directions of RS research. Future research should pay more attention to the impact of multi-spatial scale changes on RS as well as propose theoretical explanations rooted in local contexts by integrating multidisciplinary theoretical knowledge. |
format |
Article in Journal/Newspaper |
author |
Kaihuai Liao Peiyi Lv Shixiang Wei Tianlan Fu |
author_facet |
Kaihuai Liao Peiyi Lv Shixiang Wei Tianlan Fu |
author_sort |
Kaihuai Liao |
title |
A Scientometric Review of Residential Segregation Research: A CiteSpace-Based Visualization |
title_short |
A Scientometric Review of Residential Segregation Research: A CiteSpace-Based Visualization |
title_full |
A Scientometric Review of Residential Segregation Research: A CiteSpace-Based Visualization |
title_fullStr |
A Scientometric Review of Residential Segregation Research: A CiteSpace-Based Visualization |
title_full_unstemmed |
A Scientometric Review of Residential Segregation Research: A CiteSpace-Based Visualization |
title_sort |
scientometric review of residential segregation research: a citespace-based visualization |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
publishDate |
2022 |
url |
https://doi.org/10.3390/su15010448 https://doaj.org/article/e61657246840474c82d449a802d48e58 |
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Iceland |
genre_facet |
Iceland |
op_source |
Sustainability, Vol 15, Iss 448, p 448 (2022) |
op_relation |
doi:10.3390/su15010448 2071-1050 https://doaj.org/article/e61657246840474c82d449a802d48e58 |
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https://doi.org/10.3390/su15010448 |
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Sustainability |
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15 |
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448 |
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