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Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons

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University of Nebraska at Omaha

Newsletter

1979

Articles 1 - 12 of 12

Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences

Review Of Applied Urban Research 1979, Vol. 07, No. 12, Center For Public Affairs Research (Cpar) Dec 1979

Review Of Applied Urban Research 1979, Vol. 07, No. 12, Center For Public Affairs Research (Cpar)

Publications

This issue of Review of Applied Urban Research features "Filtering and Neighborhood Change in Omaha's Bemis Park," by Donald Guy.

Many ways to approach the problem of neighborhood change are possible. One major theory in the literature on housing markets deals with the way in which property values in a neighborhood change over time and is referred to as the theory of filtering.


Review Of Applied Urban Research 1979, Vol. 07, No. 11, Center For Public Affairs Research (Cpar) Nov 1979

Review Of Applied Urban Research 1979, Vol. 07, No. 11, Center For Public Affairs Research (Cpar)

Publications

This issue of Review of Applied Urban Research features "Burglary Offender Characteristics Can Be Predicted: Enhancing Investigation Efficiency Through the Development of Probability Models1," by Chris W. Eskridge.

Crime is not a new phenomenon in American living. For decades, researchers have documented and projected the growth and devastating complexity of the crime problem in the United States, its causes, and its destructive effects on national life. The intense damage to innocent persons, property, and spirit, coupled with the lingering fear of unprovoked, unpredictable violence are indeed familiar entities in all realms of society.


Review Of Applied Urban Research 1979, Vol. 07, No. 10, Center For Public Affairs Research (Cpar) Oct 1979

Review Of Applied Urban Research 1979, Vol. 07, No. 10, Center For Public Affairs Research (Cpar)

Publications

This issue of Review of Applied Urban Research features "Interstate Freeways Attract New Office Sites," by Murray Frost and Armin K. Ludwig.

Completion of the interstate highway network in American metropolitan areas has opened a wide variety of locational options for urban land uses. New office sites have been salient among these developments. The purpose of this study is to compare Interstate radial freeway corridors with other spatial units in Omaha and six other metropolitan areas to determine their differential attraction for new office sites in the period 1970-1976. The seven metropolitan areas studied were Atlanta, Dallas, Denver, Louisville, Minneapolis-St. …


Review Of Applied Urban Research 1979, Vol. 07, No. 09, Center For Public Affairs Research (Cpar) Sep 1979

Review Of Applied Urban Research 1979, Vol. 07, No. 09, Center For Public Affairs Research (Cpar)

Publications

This issue of Review of Applied Urban Research features "Households Moving to City Triple Those Leaving: In-Migration and Net Migration to the City of Omaha, August, 1977 - July, 1978," by Armin K. Ludwig.

The purpose of this study is twofold; 1) to determine the counties in the United States from which households moved to the city of Omaha for the period August, 1977 through July, 1978; and 2) to establish the net household migration between Omaha and these counties for the same period. The net migration figure was developed for a given county by subtracting the number of households …


Review Of Applied Urban Research 1979, Vol. 07, No. 07, Center For Public Affairs Research (Cpar) Jul 1979

Review Of Applied Urban Research 1979, Vol. 07, No. 07, Center For Public Affairs Research (Cpar)

Publications

This issue of Review of Applied Urban Research features "Mid-continent Net Migration Losses Decline: Centers of Net Migration Gains in the Great Plains, 1970-1976," by Armin K. Ludwig.

As a unit the American region known as the Great Plains suffered net migration losses in each of the five census periods prior to 1970. During the following six years, however, these losses had begun to abate.1 This study examines the 1970-1976 net migration changes in a bloc of 320 nonmetropolitan, nonmetropolitan- fringe counties roughly coincident with the Great Plains and seeks to account for the higher net migration gains recorded …


Review Of Applied Urban Research 1979, Vol. 07, No. 06, Center For Public Affairs Research (Cpar) Jun 1979

Review Of Applied Urban Research 1979, Vol. 07, No. 06, Center For Public Affairs Research (Cpar)

Publications

This issue of Review of Applied Urban Research features "New Migration Patterns Emerge in U.S.: The Movement of Metropolitan Populations to Nonmetropolitan America: Anomaly or Trend?" by David R. DiMartino.

Internal migration patterns have shifted markedly in the United States during the twentieth century. The exodus of rural populations to urban centers which dominated internal migration during the nineteenth century continued into the twentieth. By mid-century, however, that earlier pattern had given way to different, dominant trends. On the one hand, urban centers had grown massively and were sprawling rapidly out· ward, creating a pattern of decentralized metropolitan populations in …


Review Of Applied Urban Research 1979, Vol. 07, No. 05, Center For Public Affairs Research (Cpar) May 1979

Review Of Applied Urban Research 1979, Vol. 07, No. 05, Center For Public Affairs Research (Cpar)

Publications

This issue of Review of Applied Urban Research features "Change Develops in Migration Patterns: Destinations of Household Moves from the City of Omaha, 1975-76 and 1977-78," by Armin K. Ludwig.

American Migratory Patterns between 1970 and 1976 began to reflect a growing tendency for metropolitan counties (SMSA's)1 to suffer net migration losses and for nonmetropolitan counties to record net migration gains. The nonmetropolitan counties which had the largest net gains were those which are contiguous to an SMSA and which thus form a metropolitan fringe. This contiguity of SMSA and fringe suggests that a loss in a given SMSA is …


Review Of Applied Urban Research 1979, Vol. 07, No. 04, Center For Public Affairs Research (Cpar) Apr 1979

Review Of Applied Urban Research 1979, Vol. 07, No. 04, Center For Public Affairs Research (Cpar)

Publications

This issue of Review of Applied Urban Research features "Few Young Nebraskans Stay in Home Areas: The Impact of Rural Nebraska Industrial Development on the Migration of Rural Youth," by Armin K. Ludwig.

For more than a century Americans have migrated from the rural communities in which they were raised, but by 1970 this process had begun to change. Nebraska, however, has not reflected this change, and as late as 1976 the State stood alone among seven central and southern plains states in having non-metropolitan losses in population.! Nevertheless, during the 1970's the number of manufacturing industries in the State's …


Review Of Applied Urban Research 1979, Vol. 07, No. 03, Center For Public Affairs Research (Cpar) Mar 1979

Review Of Applied Urban Research 1979, Vol. 07, No. 03, Center For Public Affairs Research (Cpar)

Publications

This issue of Review of Applied Urban Research features "A Formula for Allocation of Housing Assistance," by Jack Ruff.

In recent years many governmental agencies and private businesses have expressed an interest in the housing needs of Nebraska communities. Government agencies are concerned with the needs of various communities in order to allocate resources, and the private sector needs information to determine the profitability of a capital venture.


Review Of Applied Urban Research 1979, Vol. 07, No. 02, Center For Public Affairs Research (Cpar) Feb 1979

Review Of Applied Urban Research 1979, Vol. 07, No. 02, Center For Public Affairs Research (Cpar)

Publications

This issue of Review of Applied Urban Research features "Understanding the Puzzle of Child Abuse."

Topics covered are "Education for Parents - A Need and a Repsonse" and "Nebraska Child Welfare Works Given Legal Training Program."


Review Of Applied Urban Research 1979, Vol. 07, No. 01, Center For Public Affairs Research (Cpar) Jan 1979

Review Of Applied Urban Research 1979, Vol. 07, No. 01, Center For Public Affairs Research (Cpar)

Publications

This issue of Review of Applied Urban Research features "Defender, Prosecutor, Defendant: Plea Bargaining - Three Perspectives," by Julie Horney.

In recent years the administration of criminal justice in this country has become increasingly dominated by the process known as "plea bargaining." In plea bargaining a defendant waives the right to trial by pleading guilty in return for certain advantages offered by the state. The state benefits in terms of the time and money saved by avoiding a trial. The practice is so pervasive that in many jurisdictions fewer than 10 percent of the criminal defendants ever stand trial.


Day By Day Care Newsletter: October 1979 - June 1980, Center For Public Affairs Research (Cpar) Jan 1979

Day By Day Care Newsletter: October 1979 - June 1980, Center For Public Affairs Research (Cpar)

Publications

Issues of Day by Day Care Newsletter, October 1979 though Fall 1980.