Geography
Modeling the sociospatial constraints on Land-Use change: The case of periurban sprawl in the greater boston region
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Land-use-change drivers related to institutional dynamics, including historical path dependencies and political dynamics associated with urban land transformation, are difficult to relate to specific spatial locations and thus are not easily included in spatial models of urban land-use change. In this paper we describe a land-use model with variables representing such institutional dynamics in the Greater Boston region, a metropolitan area characterized by periurban sprawl, for the period 1985–99. An aggregate land-use model is developed at the municipal level, based on a narrative analysis drawn from in-depth interviews with town planners, state officials, and land developers, to explain land-development patterns documented over that study period using aerial photography. Explanatory variables, including town financial variables, school quality measures, and spatial variables associated with access and location, are linked to landchange outcomes through the selection environment framework, a framework borrowed from economic geography to describe how regional growth patterns are shaped by locally specific institutional, market, and spatial contexts that constrain individual land-use decision makers. Results of the analysis suggest that institutional dynamics associated with housing values and associated tax revenues, educational expenditures, and exclusive zoning practices significantly explain municipal land-use change in the suburban or periurban context.
Publication Title
Environment and Planning B: Planning and Design
Publication Date
2015
Volume
42
Issue
2
First Page
221
Last Page
241
ISSN
0265-8135
DOI
10.1068/b38018
Keywords
land use, metropolitan areas, model calibration, policy support
Repository Citation
McCauley, Stephen M.; Rogan, John; Murphy, James T.; Turner, Billie L.; and Ratick, Samuel, "Modeling the sociospatial constraints on Land-Use change: The case of periurban sprawl in the greater boston region" (2015). Geography. 642.
https://commons.clarku.edu/faculty_geography/642