| 英文摘要 |
The government has assisted disadvantaged groups that cannot afford housing with ”public housing” projects. However, the poverty subculture and increasing crimes around the community where the disadvantaged groups have gathered has led to an increase in the external cost for the city. Residential segregation in the city grows in intensity due to labeling and stigmatization in places where the disadvantaged groups with homogeneous characteristics are gathered. In this paper, housing labeling is imported as an exogenous variable to investigate what can influence the performance of property management in the community. In order to investigate the interrelationships between community consciousness and maintained performance on the basis of the labeling level, two intervening variables including community consciousness and community participation are also introduced into the theoretical framework by the structural equation model. Investors often adopt a strategy of mix in size whenever they make a decision on a project on either the ”main floor” or ”non-main floor” in product positioning. This paper attempts to investigate the differences in community maintained performance between the ”main floor” and ”non-main floor” and the demonstrative results show that residents in the ”main floor” have a high level in community consciousness. Moreover this paper shows that the higher the level in housing labeling is, the more segregated the community will be. This implies that consistency in families' backgrounds is contributing to coherence in community consciousness, and that community activities can then be accepted by families easily as well as participation proportions consequentially increased. Therefore, the community maintained performance level becomes high due to overall participation in activities with residents in the community. |