Twenty-five years ago, William J. Wilson drew widespread attention to increases in the concentration of poverty in the United States and the diminished life chances of “the truly disadvantaged”. The hypothesis that growing up in a severely deprived neighborhood threatens well-being is rooted in a long scientific tradition. From Victorian London to present-day America, research has shown links between neighborhood poverty and outcomes such as crime, economic dependency, poor physical health, teenage pregnancy, and school dropout. But could the characteristics of individuals living in deprived neighborhoods explain these observed associations rather than the characteristics of the neighborhood itself? On page 1505 of this issue, Ludwig et al....
Nearly 9 million Americans live in extreme-poverty neighborhoods, places that also tend to be racial...
Objectives. The health consequences of neighborhood poverty are a public health problem. Data were o...
To use Lisbeth Schorr’s term, children who are at risk for “rotten outcomes” are not randomly scatte...
Summary. Poverty concentration in urban neighbourhoods may have detrimental long-term effects on res...
The Moving to Opportunity (MTO) housing experiment has proven to be an important intervention not ju...
According to the neighborhood effects hypothesis, there is a negative relation between neighborhood ...
Studies of context effects - for example, effects of neighborhoods, schools, kinship units, or all o...
151 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2002.The study finds that teens li...
Summary. One cen tral thesis in recen t urban poverty research, that social con text has further dis...
A large body of literature suggests that neighborhood socioeconomic disadvantage is positively assoc...
According to the neighborhood effects hypothesis, there is a negative relation between neighborhood ...
The lack of socioeconomic mobility among marginalized populations leads to the concentration of pove...
Residential segregation of America’s neighborhoods by income has been increasing over the past 40 ye...
According to the neighborhood effects hypothesis, there is a negative relation between neighborhood ...
Neighborhoods are increas-ingly studied as a context where children and youth develop; however, the ...
Nearly 9 million Americans live in extreme-poverty neighborhoods, places that also tend to be racial...
Objectives. The health consequences of neighborhood poverty are a public health problem. Data were o...
To use Lisbeth Schorr’s term, children who are at risk for “rotten outcomes” are not randomly scatte...
Summary. Poverty concentration in urban neighbourhoods may have detrimental long-term effects on res...
The Moving to Opportunity (MTO) housing experiment has proven to be an important intervention not ju...
According to the neighborhood effects hypothesis, there is a negative relation between neighborhood ...
Studies of context effects - for example, effects of neighborhoods, schools, kinship units, or all o...
151 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2002.The study finds that teens li...
Summary. One cen tral thesis in recen t urban poverty research, that social con text has further dis...
A large body of literature suggests that neighborhood socioeconomic disadvantage is positively assoc...
According to the neighborhood effects hypothesis, there is a negative relation between neighborhood ...
The lack of socioeconomic mobility among marginalized populations leads to the concentration of pove...
Residential segregation of America’s neighborhoods by income has been increasing over the past 40 ye...
According to the neighborhood effects hypothesis, there is a negative relation between neighborhood ...
Neighborhoods are increas-ingly studied as a context where children and youth develop; however, the ...
Nearly 9 million Americans live in extreme-poverty neighborhoods, places that also tend to be racial...
Objectives. The health consequences of neighborhood poverty are a public health problem. Data were o...
To use Lisbeth Schorr’s term, children who are at risk for “rotten outcomes” are not randomly scatte...