Geography can become a root cause for inequality when cities are built in a way that fragments social networks, finds new research with Hub participation, just published in Nature Communications.
COMMUNITIES WORLDWIDE ARE TRYING TO ADDRESS INEQUALITY…
ONE PROMISING APPROACH COULD BE TO LOOK AT THE DESIGN OF A CITY, ACCORDING TO RESEARCH WITH REAL-WORLD DATA.
An international team of scientists, including Johannes Wachs (CSH Faculty) and János Kertész (CSH External Faculty), show that urban planning directly influences the formation of social networks in a city and subsequently the socio-economic equality or inequality of its citizens.
“We know how important social networks are for our social and economic outcomes,” Johannes explains. Social relations provide individuals with essential access to resources, information, economic opportunities and other forms of support. In towns with more evenly distributed social networks, the economic inequality tended to be much lower than in towns with highly fragmented social networks, the study shows.
The scientists even found a vicious cycle: the higher the fragmentation of social networks, the higher was the income inequality in a town over time.
ON THE WRONG SIDE OF THE TRACKS?
But where does such fragmentation come from? The researchers argue that one root cause lies in geography.
To test their hypothesis, the complexity scientists used a large dataset from Hungary with two million individuals from about 500 towns. The data were retrieved from iWiW, a once—and before Facebook—very popular social media platform used by nearly 40 percent of the Hungarian population.
“Urban sociology research says that people cannot easily build social ties when they are separated by large physical obstacles such as rivers, railways, highways or walls,” Johannes points out. “It was impressive to see this confirmed in our data: we could see evidence of strong physical boundaries in a city just by looking at its social network.”
IMAGE: INCOME INEQUALITY CORRELATES WITH SOCIAL NETWORK FRAGMENTATION IN TOWNS
CITY DESIGN AND INCOME GO HAND IN HAND
“We hypothesized—and confirm it with our findings—that if valuable ideas and information cannot float freely through a city because that city is physically fragmented, which in turn causes social fragmentation, we will see inequality. We clearly see how strongly geography and income inequality are related,” says Johannes.
Of course, social networks do not form in a vacuum. A lot of different mechanisms influence with whom we are in regular contact. For instance, humans tend to befriend similar people (“homophily”). Friends of friends also show the tendency to become friends too (“triadic closure”). Yet, the iWiW data found geographic indicators of towns as an additional strong predictor of fragmentation in social networks.
The findings are of great value for city planners.
“You hardly can change social networks directly via public policy. You cannot force people to interact if they don’t want to,” says the CSH researcher. Yet, towns and cities frequently make decisions about the built environment that will have effects on how their inhabitants can meet and interact. “If these decisions reflect on our findings, we predict that cities will have fewer problems with inequality in the future,” Johannes concludes.
The publication “Inequality is rising where social network segregation interacts with urban topology” by G. Toth, J. Wachs, R. Di Clemente, A. Jakobi, B. Sagvari, J. Kertesz, and B. Lengyel appeared in Nature Communications 12, 1127 (18 Feb 2021) https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-021-21465-0
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