Journal article
A systematic review of the relationship between urban forest quality and socioeconomic status or race
G Allegretto, D Kendal, EJ Flies
Urban Forestry and Urban Greening | Published : 2022
Abstract
The quantity of urban forests in cities is critical for biodiversity conservation and human health, and is known to be distributed unequally. Increasingly, the quality of urban forests are also being recognised as shaping the benefits they provide. Previous studies and reviews have demonstrated that the quality of urban green spaces is associated with patterns of inequality as measured by socio-economic status and race (in the U.S). This study extends this body of knowledge to urban forests by systematically reviewing the urban forest literature (that explicitly study the urban forest) exploring the relationship between urban forest quality and both socio-economic status and race. Two academ..
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Grants
Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
This research was funded by the School of Biological Sciences at the University of Tasmania through the Professor Newton Barber Scholarship awarded to the GA. EJF, DK and GA are supported by a University of Tasmania Research Enhancement Program grant Healthy Future Environments and People. DK is supported by an Australian Research Council grant LP160100780 Managing Urban Trees for People and Wildlife.