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Home >> Research >> Grantee Research >> DDRG Dissertation

Intraurban Mobility Patterns of Mexican Immigrants in Emerging Gateways

Author: Pamela Ann Rogers

Dissertation School: University of Texas at Austin

Pages: 388

Publication Date: May 2006

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Access Number: 10812

Abstract:

The 2000 Census identified changes in immigrant settlement patterns and the emergence of new immigrant gateways during the 1990s; however, few immigration studies to date have studied the intra-urban or local residential mobility of immigrants in metropolitan areas or the forms of spatial assimilation taking place. This dissertation examines the recent trends occurring in intra-urban mobility, immigration, and urban settlement patterns in Texas gateways, which have attracted an unprecedented number of Mexican immigrants since the 1970s. By examining the residential and social mobility of immigrants in metropolitan areas, the study clarifies how the discipline defines gateway cities and furthers our understanding of intra-urban mobility versus inter-urban migration, the determinants of immigrant homeownership, and the spatial transitions that immigrants, ethnic communities, and metropolitan areas are undergoing.

Using the 2000 Census and the 5-percent PUMS, the dissertation examines the socioeconomic characteristics of immigrant movers and non-movers in Public-Use Microdata Areas (PUMAS) in Houston, Dallas-Fort Worth, San Antonio, and Austin-San Marcos and the housing outcomes (homeowner versus renter), settlement patterns (central city, inner ring, and suburbs), and socioeconomic characteristics of the native-born and immigrants. The findings do not support theories of spatial assimilation proposed and indicate that while the majority of immigrant movers arrived 10 to 15 years prior to the census, the majority were primarily renters, residing in urban areas in central cities or in older suburbs adjacent to Latino barrios and living in overcrowded large apartment settings typical of the "vecindad" rather than the New Urbanist "barrio."

Through spatial analysis, the dissertation identifies the extension of immigrant communities toward older working-class suburbs. A logistic regression analysis of the main determinants of Mexican immigrant homeownership differentiates the main predictors of homeownership by metropolitan areas. Age, household type, income, location of metropolitan residence, and citizenship were the most significant predictors of homeownership. The study introduces a Time to Homeownership variable to estimate the number of years immigrants require to become homeowners. Overall, immigrants may not initially become homeowners in the first decade upon arrival, but homeownership is evident for some immigrants who have lived in the United States for 10 years or more.

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