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Using linked consumer and administrative data to model demographic changes in Londons city fringe

In: Big Data Applications in Geography and Planning

Author

Listed:
  • Justin van Dijk
  • Guy Lansley
  • Paul Longley

Abstract

Like many other cosmopolitan neighbourhoods around the world, several neighbourhoods in East London have experienced rapid social and demographic change through gentrification. This chapter harnesses linked consumer and administrative data collected over a 20-year period to measure the geodemographic changes that have occurred in three neighbourhoods in London’s city fringe: Hoxton East and Shoreditch, Spitalfields and Banglatown, and Whitechapel. Using an address-level linked database, representative of the vast majority of the adult population in the United Kingdom, we produce highly granular estimations of geodemographic characteristics such as ethnicity and we characterise residential moves by their origins and destinations.

Suggested Citation

  • Justin van Dijk & Guy Lansley & Paul Longley, 2021. "Using linked consumer and administrative data to model demographic changes in Londons city fringe," Chapters, in: Mark Birkin & Graham Clarke & Jonathan Corcoran & Robert Stimson (ed.), Big Data Applications in Geography and Planning, chapter 4, pages 43-51, Edward Elgar Publishing.
  • Handle: RePEc:elg:eechap:19400_4
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