SPATIAL HETEROGENEITY OF THE US TERRITORY: AN ETHNOGEOGRAPHICAL FACTOR

Authors

  • Aleksei D. Prokofev Saint Petersburg State University, St. Petersburg, Russia, Scientific Research Institute of Perspective Urban Development, St. Petersburg, Russia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17072/2079-7877-2024-2-93-108

Keywords:

ethnogeographic group, ethnoracial composition, county, US population, cluster analysis, spatial differences, classification of the US territory

Abstract

The US population, formed by the descendants of immigrants, is characterized by extreme ethnogeographic diversity. Thisdiversity has pronounced spatial differentiation, which has been repeatedly examined in geographical studies of the US population. At the sametime, despite the large number of such studies, differentiation of territories according to the ethnogeographic composition of the population has notbeen carried out. The purpose of this study is to classify the territory of the United States according to the ethnogeographic composition of thepopulation and to reveal spatial changes that occurred from 2000 to 2020. The analysis was carried out at the county level with 12 ethnogeographicgroups taken as examples (Americans, African Americans, Mexicans, English, French, Irish, Germans, Italians, Poles, Russians, Chinese, andAsian Indians). To identify types of the US territory, a cluster analysis (k-means algorithm) was conducted. As a result, 13 ethnogeographical typesof the US territory were identified and characterized. The largest cluster in terms of area in 2020 turned out to have no clearly defined ethnogeographic dominant in the population. In general, this feature is typical for more than a third of the territory of the United States. A comparison ofdata for 2000 and 2020 showed that the greatest change in the ethnogeographic composition was experienced by the Southern States, where therewas a significant reduction in the share of people of American ancestry in the total population. The territorial clusters obtained as a result of thestudy can be used to assess other characteristics of the population that US statistics do not consider separately for ethnogeographic groups.

Author Biography

Aleksei D. Prokofev, Saint Petersburg State University, St. Petersburg, Russia, Scientific Research Institute of Perspective Urban Development, St. Petersburg, Russia

Postgraduate Student, Economist

Published

2024-06-30

How to Cite

Prokofev А. Д. (2024). SPATIAL HETEROGENEITY OF THE US TERRITORY: AN ETHNOGEOGRAPHICAL FACTOR. Geographical Bulletin, (2(69), 93–108. https://doi.org/10.17072/2079-7877-2024-2-93-108

Issue

Section

Economic, Social and Political Geography