Wealth and Identity: The dynamics of dual segregation
Anand Sahasranaman, Henrik Jeldtoft Jensen

TL;DR
This paper models the interplay between wealth and identity segregation, revealing that reducing wealth segregation can unintentionally increase identity-based segregation, with implications for urban policy and migration dynamics.
Contribution
It extends existing models to include migration, demonstrating a non-linear transition between segregated and mixed states in wealth and identity, highlighting a trade-off in urban policy.
Findings
Sharp transition from segregated to mixed wealth states
Decrease in wealth segregation increases identity segregation
Rapid migration accelerates tolerance breaches
Abstract
We extend our model of wealth segregation to incorporate migration and study the tendencies towards dual segregation - segregation due to identity (migrants vs. residents) and segregation due to wealth. We find a sharp, non-linear transformation between segregated and mixed-wealth states as neighborhood wealth thresholds become less stringent, allowing agents to move into neighborhoods they cannot afford. The number of such moves required for the onset of this transformation varies inversely with the likelihood of agents willing to move into less wealthy neighborhoods. We also find that this sharp transformation from segregated to mixed wealth states is simultaneously accompanied by a corresponding non-linear transformation from a less identity-segregated to a highly identity-segregated state. We argue that the decrease in wealth segregation does not merely accompany, but in fact drives…
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