Submitted:
23 November 2025
Posted:
25 November 2025
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Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction
2. Urban Justice as a Concept of Distribution
3. Methods
- Mapping the Selected Phenomenon: The researcher begins by defining the phenomenon of interest and its boundaries. This includes clarifying why the phenomenon is theoretically significant and identifying the main domains or scholarly fields relevant to it.
- Extensive Reading and Categorization of the Literature: An iterative, open-ended review of diverse sources—academic articles, books, policy documents, and theoretical texts—is conducted. The goal is not merely to summarize prior research but to identify emerging patterns, recurrent themes, and key conceptual elements.
- Identifying and Naming Concepts: From the literature, the researcher extracts core concepts that explain, structure, or give meaning to the phenomenon. Concepts are selected for their analytical relevance, theoretical richness, and explanatory potential.
- Deconstructing and Categorizing the Concepts: Each concept is analyzed in depth. The researcher deconstructs its meanings, assumptions, uses, and variations across different academic contexts. Concepts are then grouped into categories or thematic clusters.
- Integrating and Synthesizing the Concepts Into a Coherent Framework: The relationships among concepts are mapped—hierarchical, causal, overlapping, or complementary. Through synthesis, the framework begins to take shape as an interconnected system of meanings.
- Validating the Conceptual Framework: The emerging framework is compared with the literature for coherence, comprehensiveness, and internal logic. Validation includes checking whether the framework effectively explains the phenomenon and whether it aligns with or contributes to existing theoretical debates.
- Rethinking, Refining, and Revising the Framework: The framework remains dynamic and is revised through further reading, reflection, and conceptual clarification. Jabareen emphasizes that conceptual frameworks are not static but evolve through continuous engagement with theory.
- Presenting the Framework: Finally, the framework is articulated visually and narratively, showing how the selected concepts interact to explain the phenomenon. The presentation highlights the logic of relationships and the theoretical contributions generated by the framework.
4. Results
4.1. Concepts of the Contributions of Spatial Planning or Zoning Parameters for Social Justice
| Parameters | Authors | Conclusion Regarding their Contribution to Social Justice |
|---|---|---|
| Density | [19] | “Restrictive density zoning produces higher housing prices in White areas and limits opportunities for people with modest incomes to leave segregated areas, a perspective [….] showing that this zoning increases housing prices” (p. 801) |
| [20] | “Zoning ordinances are used to deter the entry of minority residents into majority neighborhoods through density restrictions (exclusionary zoning) and locate manufacturing activity in minority neighborhoods (environmental racism)” (p.1) | |
| “Neighborhoods with more black residents were more likely to be zoned for higher density buildings, suggesting that volume restrictions were used as an early form of exclusionary zoning” (p.26) | ||
| [18] | “Suburban jurisdictions with more units zoned, or designated, for high-density development have greater increases in their multifamily housing stocks” and are disproportionately located in minority communities and are “lower in communities that are more predominantly White” (p, 446). | |
| Housing types | [21] | “Zoning exclusively for detached houses effectively excludes large numbers of non-White households, as well as many white ones, who rent” (p. 41) |
| [22] | “Zoning that privilege “single-family homes promote exclusion and […..] contributes to shortages of housing, thereby benefiting homeowners at the expense of renters and forcing many housing consumers to spend more on housing” (p.106) | |
| Minimum lot sizes | [52] | “Stringent minimum lot size restrictions significantly increase housing prices, primarily by shifting building characteristics, and intensify segregation by disproportionately attracting high-income white homeowners” (p. 26) |
| [53] | “High minimum lot sizes were used by white natives to restrict homes built for blacks and foreigners” (p. 8). | |
| [54] | “Larger plots have higher ownership costs such as higher land rent and property tax” making it unaffordable for low-income groups” (p. 471) | |
| Parking requirements | [23] | “Costs of parking provision are high, and these costs are passed on to renters” fostering unaffordability and hence exclusion to low-income populations” (p.19) |
| Building height | [20] | “Ordinance was to reduce the density of immigrant neighborhoods in the future via constraints on building height” (p.26) |
| Setbacks | [51] | “Higher minimum required set-backs […..] cause large declines in the share of homes that are affordable” (p. 266). |
| Land use distribution through parameters | ||
| Green Spaces | [31] | “The massive park allocation and construction results into “gentrifying neighboring communities and forcing marginalized people to move away from the new green spaces”(p. 11) |
| Commercial facilities | [37] | “Low-income households face higher food prices in large part as a result of a lack of supermarket availability in their neighborhoods” (p, 194) |
| Distribution through Parameters | Authors | Conclusion Regarding their Contribution to Social Justice |
|---|---|---|
| Green space | [29] | “White-majority census tracts, regardless of income level, have much better urban green space accessibility than minority- dominated census tracts” (p. 8) |
| [27] | “Accessibility to greenspaces was higher in neighborhoods with lower levels of deprivation and a lower proportion of ethnic minority residents.” (p.143) | |
| [57] | Neighborhoods with a higher concentration of African Americans, Asian and socioeconomically disadvantaged areas had significantly poorer access to green spaces (pp 237- 242) | |
| Public facilities | [32] | “The northern half of the city, which was the residence of the upper and middle classes, enjoyed a wide range of social and physical advantages over the southern half “ (p, 6549), |
| [33] | “Although many low-income households fall within the catchment areas of health facilities, there are still more low-income residents without access to health facilities than their higher income counterparts” (p.9) | |
| Road network | [38] | “Wealthier groups […….] have better access and provision of urban space for urban mobility adapted to their needs” (p.10) |
| Sidewalk | [39] | “Sidewalk unevenness and the number of natural or artificial obstructions are greater in neighborhoods that are predominantly African–American, […..] than in primarily white neighborhoods with a lower percentage of individuals living in poverty” (p.982) |
| Distribution through Parameters | Authors | Conclusion Regarding their Contribution to Social Justice |
|---|---|---|
| Green spaces | [28] | “Neighborhoods with higher socioeconomic status are more likely to have more Urban public green spaces (UPGSs) abundance” (p. 474) |
| [30] | “Urban green infrastructure is disproportionately more abundant in high-income relative to low-in- come and in White relative to Black-African, Colored and Indian’ census tracts” (p, 6) | |
| [62] | “Low-income ethnic areas have significantly less access to parks than high-income white areas” (p.88) | |
| Commercial facilities | [36] | “Predominantly White neighborhoods also have significantly more diverse food service activity than predominantly Black neighborhoods” (p. 84) |
| Signage | [63] | Restricts the visibility of minority signage, as seen in Chinese neighborhoods where “80 percent of signs must appear in English,” reflecting selective recognition of cultural and linguistic diversity (p.347). |
| Urban Amenity (Street trees) | [34] | Lower proportion of tree cover on public right-of-way in neighborhoods containing a higher proportion of African-Americans, low-income residents, and renters compared to White dominated areas (pp 2663–2664) |
| Street furniture | [64] | “Esthetic/social features were consistently worse in low-income and high racial/ethnic minority neighborhoods as compared to high-income or mostly White neighborhoods” (p. 215) |
5. Conceptualization of the Role of Planning and Zoning Parameters in Promoting Social Justice
6. Conclusions
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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