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%T No Place for Poor Men: On the Asymmetric Effect of Urbanization on Life Satisfaction
%A Lenzi, Camilla
%A Perucca, Giovanni
%J Social Indicators Research
%N 1
%P 165-187
%V 164
%D 2022
%K agglomeration; borrowed size; Eurobarometer 62.0 (Oct-Nov 2004) (ZA4229 v1.1.0); Eurobarometer 62.2 (Nov-Dec 2004) (ZA4231 v1.1.0); Eurobarometer 63.4 (May-Jun 2005) (ZA4411 v1.1.0); Eurobarometer 64.2 (Oct-Nov 2005) (ZA4414 v1.1.0); Eurobarometer 65.2 (Mar-May 2006) (ZA4506 v1.0.1); Eurobarometer 66.1 (Sep-Oct 2006) (ZA4526 v1.0.1); Eurobarometer 67.2 (Apr-May 2007) (ZA4530 v2.1.0); Eurobarometer 68.1 (Sep-Nov 2007) (ZA4565 v4.0.1); Eurobarometer 69.2 (Mar-May 2008) (ZA4744 v5.0.0); Eurobarometer 70.1 (Oct-Nov 2008) (ZA4819 v3.0.2); Eurobarometer 71.1 (Jan-Feb 2009) (ZA4971 v4.0.0); Eurobarometer 71.2 (May-Jun 2009) (ZA4972 v3.0.2); Eurobarometer 71.3 (Jun-Jul 2009) (ZA4973 v3.0.0); Eurobarometer 73.5 (Jun 2010) (ZA5235 v4.0.0); Eurobarometer 74.2 (2010) (ZA5449 v2.2.0)
%@ 1573-0921
%~ FDB
%> https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-86442-1
%X The literature on the geography of subjective well-being largely converges in pointing out the occurrence, at least in developed countries, of an urban/rural divide: people living in the most urbanized regions tend to be significantly less satisfied than those living in rural areas. This paper aims at reassessing this statement by taking into consideration an important aspect, frequently overlooked in the literature, i.e. people-based characteristics. Individuals are not alike and may differently experience and appreciate the advantages and disadvantages of urbanisation. Characteristics such as the level of education, the type of occupation and, more generally, the income level can mediate the capacity to reap urbanisation advantages (as the accessibility to advanced services and diversified job markets) and mitigate urbanization disadvantages (such as cost of living and congestion). Additionally, but based on the same reasoning, more educated and affluent individuals (negatively) value distance from top rank centres more than less educated and affluent ones. We test and prove these propositions in a study on the subjective well-being of more than 250,000 individuals living in European cities, defined as NUTS3 regions, in the period 2004-2010.
%C NLD
%G en
%9 Zeitschriftenartikel
%W GESIS - http://www.gesis.org
%~ SSOAR - http://www.ssoar.info