Extending the Use of Information Theory in Segregation Analyses to Construct Comprehensive Models of Segregation
Boris Barron, Yunus A. Kinkhabwala, Chriss Hess, Matthew Hall, Itai, Cohen, Tom\'as A. Arias

TL;DR
This paper extends information theory to develop comprehensive models of segregation, revealing new insights into traditional indices and demonstrating their application to U.S. city data and segregation forecasting.
Contribution
It systematically constructs models of segregation based on desirable properties of indices, highlighting the importance of functions over indices for comprehensive analysis.
Findings
Entropy index presumes specific intergroup interactions
Dissimilarity index depends on regional composition
Subtle segregation patterns correlate with minority diversity
Abstract
The traditional approach to the quantitative study of segregation is to employ indices that are selected by ``desirable properties''. Here, we detail how information theory underpins entropy-based indices and demonstrate how desirable properties can be used to systematically construct models of segregation. The resulting models capture all indices which satisfy the selected properties and provide new insights, such as how the entropy index presumes a particular form of intergroup interactions and how the dissimilarity index depends on the regional composition. Additionally, our approach reveals that functions, rather than indices, tend to be necessary mathematical tools for a comprehensive quantification of segregation. We then proceed with exploratory considerations of two-group residential segregation, finding striking similarities in major U.S. cities, subtle segregation patterns…
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Taxonomy
TopicsUrban, Neighborhood, and Segregation Studies
