Abstract

Abstract The models of urban land use developed by Burgess and Hoyt have recently been reappraised by urban factorial ecologists. The urban population studied often demonstrated sectoral spatial patterning to be characteristic of the socio-economic element. A factor analysis of 34 social and economic variables pertaining to 622 enumerator sub-districts in Johannesburg shows that although the spatial expression of socio-economic status accords closely with the findings of previous ecological studies, variations of status within sectors have in the past been obscured by inappropriate statistical testing.

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