Data in Brief (Dec 2018)

Data on children׳s neighborhood income trajectories using small geographical units to operationalize neighborhood boundaries

  • Tom Kleinepier,
  • Maarten van Ham,
  • Jaap Nieuwenhuis

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21
pp. 653 – 659

Abstract

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It is well-known that the spatial scale at which neighborhoods are operationalized can affect the outcomes we observe. This article describes a typology of children׳s neighborhood income trajectories generated by sequence analysis using 100 × 100 m grids to define neighborhoods. The article further describes ethnic differences in the prevalence of the different types of neighborhood trajectories, focusing on the children of the four largest non-Western immigrant groups in the Netherlands (Turks, Moroccans, Surinamese, Antilleans) and native Dutch children. The data can be compared to the research article “Ethnic differences in timing and duration of exposure to neighborhood disadvantage during childhood” (Kleinepier et al., 2018).