Immigrant settlement patterns, transit accessibility, and transit use
Access status:
Open Access
Type
ArticleAuthor/s
Allen, JeffFarber, Steven
Greaves, Stephen
Clinton, Geoffrey
Wu, Hao
Sarkar, Somwrita
Levinson, David M.
Abstract
Public transit is immensely important among recent immigrants for enabling daily travel and activity participation. The objective of this study is to examine whether immigrants settle in areas of high or low transit accessibility and how this affects transit mode share. This is ...
See morePublic transit is immensely important among recent immigrants for enabling daily travel and activity participation. The objective of this study is to examine whether immigrants settle in areas of high or low transit accessibility and how this affects transit mode share. This is analyzed via a comparison of two gateway cities: Sydney, Australia and Toronto, Canada. We find that in both cities, recent immigrants have greater levels of public transit accessibility, on average, compared to the overall population, but the geography of immigrant settlement is more suburbanized in Toronto than in Sydney. Secondly, using logistic regression models with spatial filters, we find significant positive relationships between immigrant settlement patterns and transit mode share, after controlling for transit accessibility and other socio-economic factors, indicating an increased reliance on public transit by recent immigrants. Via a sensitivity analysis, we find that these effects are greatest in peripheral suburbs and rural areas. These findings highlight the overall importance of providing public transit to immigrant communities, but transit usage by recent immigrants will vary regionally and depending on local neighbourhood context.
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See morePublic transit is immensely important among recent immigrants for enabling daily travel and activity participation. The objective of this study is to examine whether immigrants settle in areas of high or low transit accessibility and how this affects transit mode share. This is analyzed via a comparison of two gateway cities: Sydney, Australia and Toronto, Canada. We find that in both cities, recent immigrants have greater levels of public transit accessibility, on average, compared to the overall population, but the geography of immigrant settlement is more suburbanized in Toronto than in Sydney. Secondly, using logistic regression models with spatial filters, we find significant positive relationships between immigrant settlement patterns and transit mode share, after controlling for transit accessibility and other socio-economic factors, indicating an increased reliance on public transit by recent immigrants. Via a sensitivity analysis, we find that these effects are greatest in peripheral suburbs and rural areas. These findings highlight the overall importance of providing public transit to immigrant communities, but transit usage by recent immigrants will vary regionally and depending on local neighbourhood context.
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Date
2021Source title
Journal of Transport GeographyVolume
96Issue
103187Publisher
ElsevierLicence
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0Faculty/School
Faculty of Engineering, School of Civil EngineeringThe University of Sydney Business School
Sydney School of Architecture, Design and Planning
Department, Discipline or Centre
TransportLabShare