“…This scholarship is varied in approach, wide-ranging in focus, and embedded in a variety of subfields and disciplines (see, e.g., Lichter & Ziliak, 2017). For example, economists, political geographers, sociologists, and legal scholars have examined diverse topics such as the relationship between geographical space and income/wealth inequality (Glasmeier, 2018), urban poverty (Soja, 2010), educational inequality (Burdick-Will & Logan, 2017), and access to indigent criminal defense (Pruitt & Colgan, 2010). While not all of these studies explicitly situate themselves in the tradition of spatial inequality research, common across these studies are efforts to “examine how and why markers of stratification, such as economic well-being and access to resources as well as other inequalities related to race/ethnicity, class, gender, age, and other statuses, vary and intersect across territories” (Lobao, Hooks, & Tickmayer, 2007, p. 3).…”