Not exact matches
In the North, African - American populations are largely confined to
large urban areas and their less affluent first ring suburbs, and segregated neighborhoods that are a legacy of pre-Civil Rights era patterns of housing discrimination remain the norm in older parts of non-Southern cities, (although newer suburbs
tend to be considerably more integrated than older neighborhoods outside the South).
The final bit of evidence was that seats that contained a
larger proportion of young people did see their turnout rise more at the election... though as Chris Prosser and the rest of the BES team ably explain in their paper, this is not necessarily the strong evidence you might think: seats with more young people
tend to be
urban and more diverse, so it's equally possible that
urban areas in general saw a
larger increase in turnout.
Taken at face value this math is hard enough on gay people in small communities, but it's made even worse by the fact that gay people
tend to leave these communities and coalesce in
larger urban areas.
Our papers in Educational Policy show that CBAs in
larger districts
tend to regulate far more elements of district decision - making, and CBAs in
urban areas are more restrictive with respect to what administrators can and can not do than in smaller or non-
urban areas.
Hoxby also finds that
urban areas with a
large number of school districts, and therefore many options for families choosing where to reside,
tend to have higher test scores than cities like Miami, where one school district covers anyone living close enough to work in the city.
The Tit for Tat model is used to explain why smaller communities generally
tend to have less problems with incivility than the
largest urban areas.
tend to have less problems with incivility than the
largest urban areas.
Combine those reasons with the fact that insurance always
tends to be higher in any
large,
urban area, and that Michigan is a no - fault insurance state, and you have what InsuranceQuotes.com calls «a perfect storm of sky - high premiums.»
But unlike
large regional malls that
tend to be located in major
urban areas, outlet centers don't normally inspire the same kind of opposition from local residents, according to James Schutter, senior managing director with Newmark Knight Frank Retail, a retail real estate services firm.
However, home buyers
tend to be
larger households with children, and on average wealthier, with higher levels of education and concentrated in
urban areas.