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      Equality of access and resilience in urban population-facility networks

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      npj Urban Sustainability
      Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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          Abstract

          While conceptual definitions have provided a foundation for measuring inequality of access and resilience in urban facilities, the challenge for researchers and practitioners alike has been to develop analytical support for urban system development that reduces inequality and improves resilience. Using 30 million large-scale anonymized smartphone-location data, here, we calibrate models to optimize the distribution of facilities and present insights into the interplay between equality and resilience in the development of urban facilities. Results from ten metropolitan counties in the United States reveal that inequality of access to facilities is due to the inconsistency between population and facility distributions, which can be reduced by minimizing total travel costs for urban populations. Resilience increases with more equitable facility distribution by increasing effective embeddedness ranging from 10% to 30% for different facilities and counties. The results imply that resilience and equality are related and should be considered jointly in urban system development.

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          Most cited references56

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          Assessing Differential Impacts of COVID-19 on Black Communities

          Purpose Given incomplete data reporting by race, we used data on COVID-19 cases and deaths in US counties to describe racial disparities in COVID-19 disease and death and associated determinants. Methods Using publicly available data (accessed April 13, 2020), predictors of COVID-19 cases and deaths were compared between disproportionately (>13%) black and all other ( 13% black residents. Conclusions Nearly twenty-two percent of US counties are disproportionately black and they accounted for 52% of COVID-19 diagnoses and 58% of COVID-19 deaths nationally. County-level comparisons can both inform COVID-19 responses and identify epidemic hot spots. Social conditions, structural racism, and other factors elevate risk for COVID-19 diagnoses and deaths in black communities.
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            Defining urban resilience: A review

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              A place-based model for understanding community resilience to natural disasters

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                npj Urban Sustainability
                npj Urban Sustain
                Springer Science and Business Media LLC
                2661-8001
                December 2022
                March 31 2022
                : 2
                : 1
                Article
                10.1038/s42949-022-00051-3
                abde75a6-ab39-4926-873c-9bc8ca739938
                © 2022

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0

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