Barreira, Ana PaulaAgapito, DoraPanagopoulos, ThomasGuimarĂ£es, Maria Helena2019-11-202019-11-2020171753-50691753-5077http://hdl.handle.net/10400.1/13330The number of cities experiencing population decline has been increasing worldwide. Despite the existence of theoretical propositions of shrinkage as an opportunity to increase levels of residential satisfaction, the issue has not been addressed empirically. This article contributes to fill this gap by assessing, through survey, the residential satisfaction of inhabitants of four shrinking Portuguese cities. Data were analysed by means of a tree-decision approach: the Chi-squared Automatic Interaction Detection analysis. A sense of safety is the feature that best discriminates inhabitants' level of residential satisfaction. The results show that shrinkage due to deindustrialisation processes is detrimental to residential satisfaction.engQuality-of-lifeNeighborhood satisfactionPlace attachmentUrban shrinkageCommunity satisfactionEnvironment qualityCity-centerDeclineSenseDeterminantsExploring residential satisfaction in shrinking cities: a decision-tree approachjournal article10.1080/17535069.2016.1179784