Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
Demography, Population, and Ecology Commons™
Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Institution
- Keyword
-
- Accessibility (1)
- Apprehensions (1)
- Asylum (1)
- Border encounters (1)
- Border enforcement (1)
-
- Border security (1)
- Border statistics (1)
- Catch and release (1)
- Central America (1)
- Central American Migration Crisis (1)
- Central Americans (1)
- Credible fear (1)
- DACA (1)
- Department of Homeland Security (1)
- El Salvador (1)
- Equity (1)
- Family unit (1)
- Flores Agreement (1)
- Guatemala (1)
- Homicide (1)
- Honduras (1)
- Human smuggling (1)
- Illegal border crossings (1)
- Illegal entry (1)
- Illegal immigration (1)
- Illegal migration (1)
- Immigrants (1)
- Immigration backlog (1)
- Immigration courts (1)
- Immigration detention (1)
- Publication
Articles 1 - 2 of 2
Full-Text Articles in Demography, Population, and Ecology
Equity In Accessibility, A Case Study Of City Of Sacramento, Meredith C. Milam
Equity In Accessibility, A Case Study Of City Of Sacramento, Meredith C. Milam
City and Regional Planning
This paper is a Geographic Information Systems (GIS) spatial analysis of the transportation accessibility and equity in Sacramento, California. A literature review examines discriminatory regulatory policies in the 1900s that wrote racial segregation into law. The effects of these policies have lasting effects on spatial dispersal of people and create barriers to accessibility and therefore result in inequitable transportation systems. The accessibility and equity analysis in Sacramento explores demographic data, job concentration and available modes of transportation, and commuter data. The results of the analysis suggest that there is no “one-size-fits-all” approach when it comes to measuring accessibility and equity. …
An Inferentially Robust Look At Two Competing Explanations For The Surge In Unauthorized Migration From Central America, Nick Santos
Dissertations
The last 8 years have seen a dramatic increase in the flow of Central American apprehensions by the U.S. Border Patrol. Explanations for this surge in apprehensions have been split between two leading hypotheses. Most academic scholars, immigrant advocates, progressive media outlets, and human rights organizations identify poverty and violence (the Poverty and Violence Hypothesis) in Central America as the primary triggers responsible. In contrast, while most government officials, conservative think tanks, and the agencies that work in the immigration and border enforcement realm admit poverty and violence may underlie some decisions to migrate, they instead blame lax U.S. immigration …