Socioeconomic Factors and Urban Tree Cover Policies in a Subtropical Urban Forest
Cities are increasingly promoting policies that increase and conserve
urban forests based largely on biophysical and land use-cover metrics. This study
demonstrates how socioeconomic factors need to be considered in geospatial analyses
when formulating urban greening policies. Using remote sensing, geographical
information systems, spatial field and census data, and policy analyses, we analyzed
the effectiveness of urban forest cover policies that included socioeconomic factors
when quantifying urban forest cover. We found that urban forest cover was heterogeneous
across the study area and non-white residents younger than 19 and greater
than 45 years old living in rentals were more likely to reside in areas with less urban
forest cover than any other age cohort. Our analyses also indicated that urban forest
cover was temporally variable and demographic factors unique to Miami-Dade
County bring to light the complexity of establishing homogenous, county-wide “tree
canopy” and urban greening policy goals. We present a localized socioeconomic and
ecologically based geospatial approach for formulating urban forest cover goals.
SZANTOI Zoltan;
ESCOBEDO Francisco;
WAGNER John;
RODRIGUEZ Joysee;
SMITH Scot;
2012-10-15
BELLWETHER PUBL LTD
JRC70697
1548-1603,
https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC70697,
10.2747/1548-1603.49.3.428,
Additional supporting files
File name | Description | File type | |