Dylan Connor (@dylligent) 's Twitter Profile
Dylan Connor

@dylligent

@dyligent.bsky.social

Prof @ASU_SGSUP | @CASBSStanford 24-25 | Computational Social Science | 🇮🇪

ID: 788140818238283776

linkhttp://profconnor.github.io calendar_today17-10-2016 22:13:08

2,2K Tweet

1,1K Followers

693 Following

Wrath Of Gnon (@wrathofgnon) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Contrary to popular perception, big modern cities suppress social mobility and increase economic inequality. We really need to a return to the human scale if we want to have a future. academic.oup.com/pnasnexus/arti…

Contrary to popular perception, big modern cities suppress social mobility and increase economic inequality. We really need to a return to the human scale if we want to have a future. academic.oup.com/pnasnexus/arti…
Kris Inwood (@kris-inwood.bsky.social) (@kris_inwood) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Important new research! Big cities fuel inequality within and across generations. They generate wealth & high incomes but do not provide opportunities as they once did, especially for low-income neighborhoods & communities of color. Open access! doi.org/10.1093/pnasne…

Andrés Rodríguez-Pose (@rodriguez_pose) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Big cities once lifted people out of poverty. Now, they entrench it. Research by Dylan Connor, Tom Kemeny et al. shows that upward mobility is shifting to smaller towns. Urban sprawl locks in disadvantage. Cities must reconnect #growth with opportunity. doi.org/10.1093/pnasne…

SGSUP at ASU (@asu_sgsup) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The #AmericanDream is shifting—#ASU Associate Professor Dylan Connor and #SGSUP colleagues find that big cities are no longer the best path to upward mobility. Smaller towns now offer greater economic opportunities. 👉 Swipe to learn more about Connor’s research study and read

The #AmericanDream is shifting—#ASU Associate Professor <a href="/Dylligent/">Dylan Connor</a> and #SGSUP colleagues find that big cities are no longer the best path to upward mobility. Smaller towns now offer greater economic opportunities. 

👉 Swipe to learn more about Connor’s research study and read
Bloomberg (@business) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Big US cities are no longer the best places for low-income kids to climb the wealth latter, a new study finds. But they might still work there when they grow up trib.al/K7p0EJl