Banishment policies grant police the authority to formally ban individuals from entering public housing and arrest them for trespassing if they violate the ban. Despite its widespread use and the social consequences resulting from it, an empirical evaluation of the effectiveness of banishment has not been performed. Understanding banishment enforcement is an evolution of broken windows policing, this study explores how effective bans are at reducing crime in public housing. We analyze crime data, spanning the years 2001–2012, from six public housing communities and 13 surrounding communities in one southeastern U.S. city. Using Arellano-Bond dynamic panel models, we investigate whether or not issuing bans predicts reductions in property and...
In 1993, New York City began implementing the quality-of-life initiative, an order-maintenance polic...
The broken windows effect refers to the hypothesis that there is a positive effect of urban disorder...
In recent years, crime and public housing have been closely linked in our political and popular cult...
Banishment policies grant police the authority to formally ban individuals from entering public hous...
In their 1982 article, Wilson and Kelling offer broken windows as a functional theory of social cont...
In 1982, James Q. Wilson and George Kelling suggested in an influential article in the Atlantic Mont...
Crime in any society is inevitable. From its inception, the United States has dealt with crime in di...
For decades broken windows – the theory that tackling small nuisances will reduce the risk of more s...
Increasingly, public housing authorities (PHAs) are implementing “no-trespass” policies designed to ...
Increasingly, public housing authorities (PHAs) are implementing “no-trespass” policies designed to ...
Over the last few decades, municipalities and local governments have increasingly turned to banning ...
Crime is consistently a major concern to the public, and effective policing methods are critical to ...
Debates about the broken windows hypothesis focus almost exclusively on whether the order-maintenanc...
This chapter examines the development of “order maintenance policing” in New York City. It studies t...
Drugs, crime and public housing are closely linked in policy and politics, and their nexus has anima...
In 1993, New York City began implementing the quality-of-life initiative, an order-maintenance polic...
The broken windows effect refers to the hypothesis that there is a positive effect of urban disorder...
In recent years, crime and public housing have been closely linked in our political and popular cult...
Banishment policies grant police the authority to formally ban individuals from entering public hous...
In their 1982 article, Wilson and Kelling offer broken windows as a functional theory of social cont...
In 1982, James Q. Wilson and George Kelling suggested in an influential article in the Atlantic Mont...
Crime in any society is inevitable. From its inception, the United States has dealt with crime in di...
For decades broken windows – the theory that tackling small nuisances will reduce the risk of more s...
Increasingly, public housing authorities (PHAs) are implementing “no-trespass” policies designed to ...
Increasingly, public housing authorities (PHAs) are implementing “no-trespass” policies designed to ...
Over the last few decades, municipalities and local governments have increasingly turned to banning ...
Crime is consistently a major concern to the public, and effective policing methods are critical to ...
Debates about the broken windows hypothesis focus almost exclusively on whether the order-maintenanc...
This chapter examines the development of “order maintenance policing” in New York City. It studies t...
Drugs, crime and public housing are closely linked in policy and politics, and their nexus has anima...
In 1993, New York City began implementing the quality-of-life initiative, an order-maintenance polic...
The broken windows effect refers to the hypothesis that there is a positive effect of urban disorder...
In recent years, crime and public housing have been closely linked in our political and popular cult...