Kinder Houston Area Survey
Permanent URI for this collection
Browse
Browsing Kinder Houston Area Survey by Title
Now showing 1 - 20 of 29
Results Per Page
Sort Options
Item Metadata only The 44th Kinder Houston Area Survey: Destination Houston: A Growing Region’s Path to Prosperity(Rice University Kinder Institute for Urban Research, 2025) Potter, Daniel; Dawson, Lauren; DeLisi, Anna; Goolsby, Karen Pren; Niznik, Aaron; Njeh, Joy; Perez, Katherine; Simburger, Dylan; Valikhanova, Aiganym; Williams, LeeIn 2010, Rice University launched the Kinder Institute for Urban Research. The Houston Area Survey had just wrapped up its 29th administration. Over the past 15 years, as the Kinder Institute has expanded, it has continued to document the story of Houston through its annual survey. This year’s edition reflects on this period, highlighting one of the region’s key distinguishing traits: continued growth.Item An Historical Overview of Immigration in Houston, Based on the Houston Area Survey(Kinder Institute for Urban Research, 2008) Klineberg, Stephen L.Item Houston Area Asian Survey: Diversity and Transformation Among Asians in Houston: Findings from the Kinder Institute's Houston Area Asian Survey (1995, 2002, 2011)(Rice University, 2013) Klineberg, Stephen L.; Wu, JieDrawing on three surveys taken of Houston's Asian population in 1995, 2002 and 2011, this report documents the distinctiveness of the Asian experience and explores the most important differences in life circumstances, attitudes and beliefs among the area's four largest Asian communities – Vietnamese, Indians/Pakistanis, Chinese/Taiwanese and Filipinos.Item Houston Area Survey (1982-2007): Findings from the 26th Annual Survey(Kinder Institute for Urban Research, 2007) Klineberg, Stephen L.Item The Houston Area Survey: Central Findings from Year 28(Kinder Institute for Urban Research, 2009) Klineberg, Stephen L.Item Houston's Economic and Demographic Transformations: Findings from the Expanded 2002 Survey of Houston's Ethnic Communities(Kinder Institute for Urban Research, 2002) Klineberg, Stephen L.Item Houston's Ethnic Communities: Findings from the Thirteenth Year of the Houston Area Survey(Kinder Institute for Urban Research, 1994) Klineberg, Stephen L.Item Houston’s Ethnic Communities, Third Edition: Updated and Expanded to Include the First-Ever Survey of the Asian Communities(Kinder Institute for Urban Research, 1996) Klineberg, Stephen L.Item "Interesting Times" Transcription(Rice University, 2014) Klineberg, Stephen L.Video titled "Interesting Times: Tracking Houston's Transformations Through 30 Years of Surveys";Transcription of an interview/documentary with Dr. Stephen L. Klineberg titled "Interesting Times: Tracking Houston's Transformations Through 30 Years of Surveys"Item The Kinder Houston Area Survey-2010: Perspectives on a City in Transition(Rice University, 2010) Klineberg, Stephen L.Item The Kinder Houston Area Survey-2012: Perspectives on a city in transition(Rice University, 2012) Klineberg, Stephen L.Item Kinder Houston Area Survey: Forty-Two Years of Measuring Perceptions and Experiences of a Resilient City(Rice University, 2023) Potter, Daniel; Pren, Karen; Tobin, Alec; Perez, Katherine; Njeh, Joy; Kim, AndrewThe 2023 Kinder Houston Area Survey provides a glimpse into how Houstonians are thinking about the critical challenges and issues facing their communities. This year's survey reveals the cost of housing or the economy is the biggest problem facing the area, despite the fact that jobs have rebounded since the pandemic.Item Public Perceptions in Remarkable Times: Tracking Change Through 24 Years of Houston Surveys(Kinder Institute for Urban Research, 2005) Klineberg, Stephen L.Item Shared Prospects: Hispanics and the Future of Houston(Rice University, 2014) Klineberg, Stephen L.; Wu, Jie; Douds, Kiara; Ramirez, DianeFor the past 33 years, the Kinder Institute Houston Area Survey (KIHAS, 1982-2014) has been measuring systematically the economic and demographic trends in Harris County and recording the way area residents are responding to them. Since 1994, the surveys have been expanded to reach larger annual samples from the county’s major ethnic communities and have included questions about the respondents’ and their parents’ place of birth. In the past 21 years of surveys (1994-2014), the KIHAS has reached more than 4,800 U.S.-born Hispanics and 4,200 Latino immigrants. The rich data from this research provide a rare opportunity to explore systematically the experiences and perspectives of the different Hispanic communities over time and to assess their prospects for the future.Item The 2012 Houston Education Survey: Public Perceptions in a Critical Time(Rice University, 2013) Klineberg, Stephen L.; Wu, Jie; Douds, KiaraThis report presents some of the most important findings from the Houston Education Survey, the second of three focused surveys that are together called the “SHEA” studies (“Surveys of Health, Education, and the Arts”). Supported by a grant from Houston Endowment Inc., this research project was designed to assess the experiences, beliefs, and attitudes of Harris County residents with regard to these three critical areas of life in the Houston area. The separate surveys complement Rice University’s “Kinder Institute Houston Area Survey,” which for 32 years (1982-2013) has been tracking America’s fourth largest city in the midst of fundamental transformation.Item The 2018 Kinder Houston Area Survey: Tracking responses to income inequalities, demographic transformations, and threatening storms(Rice University, 2018) Klineberg, Stephen L.Item The 2019 Kinder Houston Area Survey: Tracking Responses to the Economic and Demographic Transformations Through 38 Years of Houston Surveys(Rice University, 2019) Klineberg, Stephen L.This report measures perspectives on Houston's local economy, social issues and demographic changes. It notes greater support for government programs to close the inequality gap and for increased funding to improve public schools. It also shows Houston-area residents are "increasingly embracing the region's burgeoning diversity," as they grow more comfortable with interethnic relationships and accepting of immigrants. The report concludes by measuring the ongoing changes in political orientations and shifting views on the direction in which the country is moving.Item The 2020 Kinder Houston Area Survey(Rice University, 2020) Klineberg, Stephen L.; Kinder Institute for Urban ResearchFor close to four decades, the Kinder Houston Area Survey has been tracking the changing attitudes and experiences of Houstonians.Item The 32nd Kinder Institute Houston Area Survey: Tracking Responses to the Economic and Demographic Transformations(Rice University, 2013) Klineberg, Stephen L.Item The 33rd Kinder Institute Houston Area Survey: The Changing Face of the Houston Region(Rice University, 2014) Klineberg, Stephen L.