OUP - DDRG Dissertations
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Access abstracts on dissertations funded by OUP's Doctoral Dissertation Research Grant program through this database. Visitors who would like to see abstracts on all DDRG dissertations can leave each dropdown menu set to "All" and then click the "Search" button.

If you would like to order a copy of a dissertation, please call the University Partnerships Clearinghouse (UPC) at 1-800-245-2691. Before calling UPC, please first check the abstract of the dissertation you are interested in requesting, to locate the dissertation's access number.

If the abstract does not have an access number, this means that we currently do not have a copy of the final dissertation on file. If the dissertation you want is not yet available, please check back frequently; we update the database as we receive final dissertations from our grantees throughout each academic year.

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  • Physical Form and Neighborhood Satisfaction: Evidence From the American Housing Survey
    By Yizhao Yang

    This research investigated the link between neighborhood satisfaction and characteristics of the built environment. Adopting multivariate statistical methods and on the basis of individual-level data from the 2002 American Housing Survey, this research used ratings of neighborhood as a place to live to assess the relative importance of various factors involved in neighborhood satisfaction. Particularly, it examined the degree to which characteristics of the built environment relevant to traditional physical form (that is, higher density, mixed land uses, and mixed housing types) associate with neighborhood satisfaction for different kinds of people.

    This study reveals that neighborhoods with traditional characteristics generally received lower neighborhood ratings than low-density, homogenous neighborhoods. After other neighborhood characteristics and household sociodemographic characteristics are controlled for, the research indicates that the higher density and mixed tenure features in the built environment area were associated with lower satisfaction levels, but diversity in terms of land use mix and housing structure mix associated with higher satisfaction levels to some degree. Further analysis shows that the single-mother headed households derived more satisfaction from living in a more mixed environment than other household types when other factors are controlled for. However, compared to such factors of housing quality and neighborhood maintenance and safety, the effects of physical form characteristics are fairly weak. (More)

  • Access to Homeownership: Race-Ethnicity, Immigrant Status, and Changing Demographics
    By Zhou Yu

    Immigration has been one of the fundamental forces that shape urban America. While the society urges immigrants to become "real" Americans, assimilation is rarely smooth. Immigrants' assimilation is well manifested in their housing outcomes, because housing is central to the American Dream and is a critical element of federal policies. (More)

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