@article{f82f9b8d1b3141f6a0f9f5705eefa5af,
title = "Sociospatial Disparities in “Third Place” Availability in the United States",
abstract = "Tertiary to home and work, “third places” serve as opportunity structures that transmit information and facilitate social capital and upward mobility. However, third places may be inequitably distributed, thereby exacerbating disparities in social capital and mobility. The authors use tract-level data from the National Neighborhood Data Archive to examine the distribution of third places across the United States. There were significant disparities in the availability of third places. Higher poverty rates were associated with fewer third places. Tracts with the smallest shares of Black and Hispanic populations had comparatively more third places. However, this racial disadvantage was not linear, suggesting potential buffering effects in places with the largest shares of Black and Hispanic populations. There was also a rural disadvantage, except in the most isolated rural tracts. This study demonstrates the value of conceptualizing and measuring third places to understand sociospatial disparities in the availability of these understudied opportunity structures.",
keywords = "racial/ethnic disparities, social mobility, socioeconomic disparities, third places",
author = "Danielle Rhubart and Yue Sun and Claire Pendergrast and Shannon Monnat",
note = "Funding Information: The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: two research networks funded by the National Institute on Aging (R24 AG065159 and 2R24 AG045061), the National Institute on Aging?funded Center for Aging and Policy Studies at Syracuse University (P30AG066583), the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development?funded Population Research Institute at Penn State (P2CHD041025), the U.S. Department of Agriculture Agricultural Experiment Station Multistate Research Project: W4001, Social, Economic and Environmental Causes and Consequences of USDA-supported Rural Population research Network, and the Syracuse University Lerner Center for Public Health Promotion. Funding Information: The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: two research networks funded by the National Institute on Aging (R24 AG065159 and 2R24 AG045061), the National Institute on Aging–funded Center for Aging and Policy Studies at Syracuse University (P30AG066583), the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development–funded Population Research Institute at Penn State (P2CHD041025), the U.S. Department of Agriculture Agricultural Experiment Station Multistate Research Project: W4001, Social, Economic and Environmental Causes and Consequences of USDA-supported Rural Population research Network, and the Syracuse University Lerner Center for Public Health Promotion. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} The Author(s) 2022.",
year = "2022",
month = apr,
doi = "10.1177/23780231221090301",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "8",
journal = "Socius",
issn = "2378-0231",
publisher = "SAGE Publications Inc.",
}