The current study evaluated a range of social influences including misdemeanor arrests, drug arrests, cocaine consumption, alcohol consumption, firearm availability, and incarceration that may be associated with changes in gun-related homicides by racial/ethnic group in New York City (NYC) from 1990 to 1999. Using police precincts as the unit of analysis, we used cross-sectional, time series data to examine changes in Black, White, and Hispanic homicides, separately. Bayesian hierarchical models with a spatial error term indicated that an increase in cocaine consumption was associated with an increase in Black homicides. An increase in firearm availability was associated with an increase in Hispanic homicides. Last, there were no significan...
Although prior research has found that homes containing firearms and illicit drug and ethanol users ...
The concentration of incarceration in social groups and areas has emerged in the past decade as a to...
Since 1968, violence and other crimes in New York City have followed a pattern of recurring epidemic...
Researchers, scholars, and policymakers interested in the falling rate of violent crime in New York ...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/63094/1/cerda_misdemeanour policing_200...
The New York Police Department (NYPD) under Operation Impact deployed extra police officers to high ...
For over half a century, the “War on Drugs” has entailed strict control and policing of illicit drug...
Patterns of stop and frisk activity by police across New York City neighborhoods reflect competing...
Homicide clearance rates in the United States have been steadily declining from the 1960s through th...
The pattern of misdemeanor marijuana arrests in New York City since the introduction of broken wind...
The contributions of order-maintenance policing and broken windows theory to New York City’s remarka...
BACKGROUND: Although Blacks and Whites in the United States use drugs at similar rates, Blacks are m...
In 1982, James Q. Wilson and George Kelling suggested in an influential article in the Atlantic Mont...
Alcohol outlets tend to cluster in lower income neighborhoods and do so disproportionately in areas ...
Recent declines in homicide in Chicago have been seen as similar to earlier declines in New York Cit...
Although prior research has found that homes containing firearms and illicit drug and ethanol users ...
The concentration of incarceration in social groups and areas has emerged in the past decade as a to...
Since 1968, violence and other crimes in New York City have followed a pattern of recurring epidemic...
Researchers, scholars, and policymakers interested in the falling rate of violent crime in New York ...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/63094/1/cerda_misdemeanour policing_200...
The New York Police Department (NYPD) under Operation Impact deployed extra police officers to high ...
For over half a century, the “War on Drugs” has entailed strict control and policing of illicit drug...
Patterns of stop and frisk activity by police across New York City neighborhoods reflect competing...
Homicide clearance rates in the United States have been steadily declining from the 1960s through th...
The pattern of misdemeanor marijuana arrests in New York City since the introduction of broken wind...
The contributions of order-maintenance policing and broken windows theory to New York City’s remarka...
BACKGROUND: Although Blacks and Whites in the United States use drugs at similar rates, Blacks are m...
In 1982, James Q. Wilson and George Kelling suggested in an influential article in the Atlantic Mont...
Alcohol outlets tend to cluster in lower income neighborhoods and do so disproportionately in areas ...
Recent declines in homicide in Chicago have been seen as similar to earlier declines in New York Cit...
Although prior research has found that homes containing firearms and illicit drug and ethanol users ...
The concentration of incarceration in social groups and areas has emerged in the past decade as a to...
Since 1968, violence and other crimes in New York City have followed a pattern of recurring epidemic...