A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
NEIGHBORHOOD DISINVESTMENT, ABANDONMENT, AND CRIME DYNAMICS
This article develops a conceptual framework of neighborhood crime dynamics based on a synthesis of criminology and neighborhood change literatures which suggests that neighborhood decline can produce a nonlinear response in crime rates. The authors probe this relationship using a rich Detroit data set containing detailed, block‐level information about housing, land, abandonment, population, schools, liquor outlets, and crime reports of various categories. Negative binomial models reveal that several neighborhood attributes are consistently associated with all types of crime (renter occupancy, population density, establishments with liquor licenses) while other attributes are only associated with particular types of crime. A simulation using estimated parameters suggests that processes of disinvestment and abandonment can generate a nonlinear pattern in the rate of growth in neighborhood crimes that vary in intensity by crime type. The authors explore the implications of their findings for anticrime strategies focusing on demolishing abandoned housing, “right‐sizing” urban footprints, and regulating liquor‐selling establishments.
NEIGHBORHOOD DISINVESTMENT, ABANDONMENT, AND CRIME DYNAMICS
This article develops a conceptual framework of neighborhood crime dynamics based on a synthesis of criminology and neighborhood change literatures which suggests that neighborhood decline can produce a nonlinear response in crime rates. The authors probe this relationship using a rich Detroit data set containing detailed, block‐level information about housing, land, abandonment, population, schools, liquor outlets, and crime reports of various categories. Negative binomial models reveal that several neighborhood attributes are consistently associated with all types of crime (renter occupancy, population density, establishments with liquor licenses) while other attributes are only associated with particular types of crime. A simulation using estimated parameters suggests that processes of disinvestment and abandonment can generate a nonlinear pattern in the rate of growth in neighborhood crimes that vary in intensity by crime type. The authors explore the implications of their findings for anticrime strategies focusing on demolishing abandoned housing, “right‐sizing” urban footprints, and regulating liquor‐selling establishments.
NEIGHBORHOOD DISINVESTMENT, ABANDONMENT, AND CRIME DYNAMICS
RALEIGH, ERICA (author) / GALSTER, GEORGE
2015
Article (Journal)
English
Welt , Stadtentwicklung , USA , Urbanistik
Elsevier | 1987
The dynamics of neighborhood property crime rates
Online Contents | 2008
|The dynamics of neighborhood property crime rates
Online Contents | 2008
|Rural Railways and Disinvestment in Rural Areas
Taylor & Francis Verlag | 1987
|Causes of disinvestment in New York City's housing
Online Contents | 1975
|