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Phoenix in Flux: Household Instability, Residential Mobility, and Neighborhood Change
Gober, P., McHugh, KE., & Reid, N. (1991). Phoenix in Flux: Household Instability, Residential Mobility, and Neighborhood Change. Annals of the American Association of Geographers, 81(1), 80-88.
The linkages between household instability and residential mobility underlie patterns of population change in the city. To explicate these linkages in Phoenix, Arizona, a rapidly growing Sunbelt city with high population turnover, we queried a sample of residents about their living arrangements and mobility status from 1986-88. The terms stable and unstable refer to household status; movers and stayers refer to mobility status. Results indicate that there is considerable flux in the Phoenix population. One-third of our respondents experienced a change in household status, a residential move, or both. The rates of mobility for rental housing exceed the rates of household change, resulting in stable moving. Owners, especially those in older neighborhoods, are more likely to change living arrangements than to move, resulting in unstable staying. Mobility exceeds household instability in areas where nonfamilies are disproportionately represented; instability exceeds mobility where families dominate. A map of family versus nonfamily households provides clues to the geographic distribution of stable movers and unstable stayers