Social Spatial Polarization in the Toronto Metropolitan Area
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Date
2011-01-10T18:57:17Z
Authors
Osolen, Rebecca Susan
Advisor
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Publisher
University of Waterloo
Abstract
This thesis presents evidence that income polarization is accompanied by increasing social-spatial disparities between areas of the city that were developed in different societal contexts, with different planning approaches, and that have different land use and transportation dynamics. An analysis of the social structure of the Toronto Metropolitan Area finds indications of widespread gentrification in the inner city, socioeconomic decline in the postwar
suburbs, and sustained household affluence in the ever expanding outermost suburbs of the metropolitan area. It is argued that, as a political and social endeavor that is embedded in broader development regimes, urban planning influences social-spatial polarization to the extent that it influences urban form.
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Keywords
Income Polarization, Metropolitan Social Structure, Urban Form