Author
Listed:
- Farnaz Kamyab
(School of Architecture, Clemson University, Fernow Street, Lee Hall, Clemson, SC 29634, USA)
- Luis Enrique Ramos-Santiago
(Department of Urban Planning and Community Development, School for the Environment, University of Massachusetts (Boston), 100 Morrissey Blvd., Boston, MA 02125, USA)
Abstract
Suburban green areas provide significant health, economic, social, and ecological benefits. They are a key element in advancing sustainability at local and regional scales. However, they become threatened in the presence of other competing land uses, neighborhood-change processes, and/or weak built-environment governance. Consequently, suburban green area loss and/or degradation is problematic. In this study, we tested whether socioeconomic decline is significantly correlated with loss or degradation of suburban green areas at a neighborhood scale. This phenomenon has been previously studied with a limited sample and methodology and needs further empirical documentation and more nuanced modeling and testing. We employed Social-Ecological System theory in scoping and framing this multidisciplinary study and informing multilevel panel-data regressions. This approach allowed us to identify key factors and lagged effects behind green area degradation in outer-ring suburbs of Los Angeles. In addition to internal socioeconomic factors, random components associated with ecological zonal distribution and county-level clustering registered significant variability in their influence on greater likelihood of green coverage loss and degradation in declining outer-ring suburbs. Findings from this study can inform intelligent spatial planning, management, and monitoring of suburban areas, and showcase the value of a social-ecological system lens in suburban green infrastructure research, as well as contribute to SES theoretical development and research methodology at the neighborhood scale.
Suggested Citation
Farnaz Kamyab & Luis Enrique Ramos-Santiago, 2025.
"Neighborhood Decline and Green Coverage Change in Los Angeles Suburbs: A Social-Ecological Perspective,"
Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 17(21), pages 1-36, November.
Handle:
RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:17:y:2025:i:21:p:9850-:d:1787531
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