@article{Krase_2010, place={Washington DC: American Sociological Association.}, title={Seminar on Ethnicity and Neighborhood: The Ethnic Mapping of Sunset Park}, url={https://trails.asanet.org/article/view/seminar-on-ethnicity-and-neighborhood-the-ethnic}, abstractNote={There are many ways of defining the boundaries of a neighborhood community. My own preference is for concrete geographical boundaries such as streets or rivers that act as edges whcih in turn surround landmarks or benchmarks and that provide closure. In urban research, demography reigns and it is convenient to utilize, often arbitrary, boundaries that have been established for the collection of data for administrative or other purposes, Gwenyth Chase eloquently defined her neighborhood visually by simply walking around the block. For most urban sociologists neighborhoods are artificially constructed out of census tracts, or smaller census blocks. These may or may not conform to the symbolic and geographical definitions of local community residents.}, journal={TRAILS: Teaching Resources and Innovations Library for Sociology}, author={Krase, Jerome}, year={2010}, month={Jun.} }