The changing consequences of residential mobility in the United Kingdom
Topics:
Keywords: Residential mobility, Housing market dynamics, Neighborhood, Geodemographics
Abstract Type: Paper Abstract
Authors:
Paul Arthur Longley University College London (UCL)
Bin Chi University College London
Abstract
This paper reports on the use of Linked Consumer Registers to characterise the changing consequences of residential mobility upon neighbourhood living circumstances. We use more than one billion name and address records collected between 1997-2023 to trace the origins and destinations of tens of thousands of residential moves. House price sales data, rental price listings, energy performance and floorspace are recorded for origin and destination residences, and the neighbourhoods in which they are located are characterised by a harmonised Index of Multiple Deprivation (hardship) and geodemographics. We examine geographic patterns of residential mobility at a range of scales and temporal changes in residential mobility.
The changing consequences of residential mobility in the United Kingdom
Category
Paper Abstract
Description
Submitted By:
Paul Longley University College London
p.longley@ucl.ac.uk
This abstract is part of a session: Geography and Data Science for Public Good III: Data-Driven Evidence and Solutions to Social and Spatial Inequalities.