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Urban Studies
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The Characteristics and Location of Home Workers in Montreal, Toronto and Vancouver

Markus Moos

Department of Geography, University of British Columbia, 1984 West Mall, Vancouver, BC, V6T 1Z2, Canada, mmoos{at}interchange.ubc.ca

Andrejs Skaburskis

Department of Geography, University of British Columbia, 1984 West Mall, Vancouver, BC, V6T 1Z2, Canada, skabursk{at}post.queensu.ca

This study analyses the distribution of home workers across the three largest urban regions in Canada and shows how they differ across sex of home worker, household type, income level, occupation and industry. The highest proportion of home workers is in art, culture and recreation occupations followed by management, the field dominated by men. Women home workers make the financial, secretarial and administrative occupations the third-largest group of home workers. The spatial distribution of home workers follows a sectoral form. While the characteristics of inner-city and suburban home workers differ, the differences are the same as for commuters. Rather than creating a completely new locational pattern, home work appears to reinforce existing urban forces of centralisation by professionals and continued decentralisation by the middle classes and those seeking larger estates, such as those in management occupations. The study suggests that the increasing trend towards home work is not dispersing cities, but allows greater locational flexibility within already-existing urban spatial patterns.

Urban Studies, Vol. 44, No. 9, 1781-1808 (2007)
DOI: 10.1080/00420980701507639


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Journal of Planning Education and ResearchHome page
M. Moos and A. Skaburskis
The Probability of Single-family Dwelling Occupancy: Comparing Home Workers and Commuters in Canadian Cities
Journal of Planning Education and Research, March 1, 2008; 27(3): 319 - 340.
[Abstract] [PDF]