wow-inequalities/02-data/intermediate/wos_sample/e42d7704822da7f214304ebb9d2f625c-allen-jeff-and-palm/info.yaml

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abstract: 'There is growing body of research and practice assessing transportation
equity and justice. Commuting is an especially important dimension to
study since such frequent, non-discretionary travel, can come at the
expense of time for other activities and therefore negatively impact
mental health and well-being. An ``extreme commuter `` is a worker who
has a particularly burdensome commute, and has previously been defined
based on one-way commute times above 60 or 90 minutes. In this paper, we
examine the social and geographic inequalities of extreme commuting in
Canada. We use a 25\% sample of all commuters in Canada in 2016 (n =
4,543,417) and our analysis consists of descriptive statistics and
logistic regression models. The average one-way commute time in 2016
across Canada was 26 minutes, but over 9.7\% of the workforce had
commute times exceeding 60 mi-nutes. However, this rate of extreme
commuting was 11.5\% for low-income households, 13.5\% for immigrants,
and 13.4\% among non-white Canadians, reaching as high as 18.6\% for
Black Canadians and 14.7\% for Latin American Canadians specifically. We
find that these inequalities persist even after controlling for
household factors, commute mode, occupation, and built environment
characteristics. The persistently significant effects of race in our
models point to factors like housing and employment discrimination as
possible contributors to extreme commuting. These results highlight
commuting disparities at a national scale prior to the COVID-19
pandemic, and represents clear evidence of structural marginalization
contributing to racialized inequalities in the critical metric of daily
commute times seldom recognized by Canadian scholars and planners.'
affiliation: 'Allen, J (Corresponding Author), Univ Toronto, Dept Geog \& Planning,
Toronto, ON, Canada.
Allen, Jeff, Univ Toronto, Dept Geog \& Planning, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Palm, Matthew; Tiznado-Aitken, Ignacio; Farber, Steven, Univ Toronto Scarborough,
Dept Human Geog, Scarborough, ON, Canada.'
author: Allen, Jeff and Palm, Matthew and Tiznado-Aitken, Ignacio and Farber, Steven
author-email: jeff.allen@utoronto.ca
author_list:
- family: Allen
given: Jeff
- family: Palm
given: Matthew
- family: Tiznado-Aitken
given: Ignacio
- family: Farber
given: Steven
da: '2023-09-28'
doi: 10.1016/j.tbs.2022.05.005
earlyaccessdate: MAY 2022
eissn: 2214-3688
files: []
issn: 2214-367X
journal: TRAVEL BEHAVIOUR AND SOCIETY
keywords: 'Commuting; Canada; Social inequalities; Extreme commuting; Race;
Immigration'
keywords-plus: 'TRADE-OFFS; TIME; TRANSPORTATION; SATISFACTION; WORK; PARTICIPATION;
ACCESSIBILITY; DETERMINANTS; DURATION; DISTANCE'
language: English
month: OCT
number-of-cited-references: '65'
orcid-numbers: 'Palm, Matthew/0000-0002-8800-2777
Tiznado Aitken, Ignacio/0000-0002-7385-2357'
pages: 42-52
papis_id: 9a3273d0f740772989f64842a0ec379d
ref: Allen2022inequalitiesextreme
researcherid-numbers: 'Tiznado-Aitken, Ignacio/AAL-7641-2020
Farber, Steven/ABE-6061-2021
'
times-cited: '2'
title: Inequalities of extreme commuting across Canada
type: article
unique-id: WOS:000809651600001
usage-count-last-180-days: '4'
usage-count-since-2013: '13'
volume: '29'
web-of-science-categories: Transportation
year: '2022'