Drawing on structural racism and urban disadvantage approaches, this article posits a broad influence of citywide racial residential segregation on levels of violent crime across all urban neighborhoods regardless of their racial/ethnic composition. Multilevel models based on data from the National Neighborhood Crime Study for 7,622 neighborhoods in 79 cities throughout the United States reveal that segregation is positively associated with violent crime for white and various types of nonwhite neighborhoods. Nonetheless, there is a lack of parity in violence across these types of communities reflecting the larger racialized social system in which whites are able to use their privileged position to reside in the most advantaged neighborhoods...
More than four decades ago, the Kerner Report chronicled the violent disturbances of the 1960s and p...
Drawing on Wilson (1987), this article assesses two hypotheses concerning the relationship between n...
A longstanding tradition of research linking neighborhood disadvantage to higher rates of violence i...
How can we understand the dramatic linkages among race, ethnicity, place, and violence in the United...
Grounded in group conflict theory and the defended neighborhoods thesis, this nationwide empirical s...
Grounded in group conflict theory and the defended neighborhoods thesis, this nationwide empirical s...
Racial/ethnic residential segregation has been shown to contribute to violence and have harmful cons...
Despite the decline in group inequality and the rapid expansion of the black middle class in the Uni...
Grounded in group conflict theory and the defended neighborhoods thesis, this nationwide empirical s...
In The Declining Significance of Race, William Julius Wilson (1987) raised key questions about the f...
In The Declining Significance of Race, William Julius Wilson (1987) raised key questions about the f...
Despite a great deal of theoretical and empirical attention given to racial residential segregation ...
Despite a great deal of theoretical and empirical attention given to racial residential segregation ...
In cities around the globe, there exists a significant correlation between racial residential segreg...
This article reports findings from a multilevel longitudinal study that brings together key individu...
More than four decades ago, the Kerner Report chronicled the violent disturbances of the 1960s and p...
Drawing on Wilson (1987), this article assesses two hypotheses concerning the relationship between n...
A longstanding tradition of research linking neighborhood disadvantage to higher rates of violence i...
How can we understand the dramatic linkages among race, ethnicity, place, and violence in the United...
Grounded in group conflict theory and the defended neighborhoods thesis, this nationwide empirical s...
Grounded in group conflict theory and the defended neighborhoods thesis, this nationwide empirical s...
Racial/ethnic residential segregation has been shown to contribute to violence and have harmful cons...
Despite the decline in group inequality and the rapid expansion of the black middle class in the Uni...
Grounded in group conflict theory and the defended neighborhoods thesis, this nationwide empirical s...
In The Declining Significance of Race, William Julius Wilson (1987) raised key questions about the f...
In The Declining Significance of Race, William Julius Wilson (1987) raised key questions about the f...
Despite a great deal of theoretical and empirical attention given to racial residential segregation ...
Despite a great deal of theoretical and empirical attention given to racial residential segregation ...
In cities around the globe, there exists a significant correlation between racial residential segreg...
This article reports findings from a multilevel longitudinal study that brings together key individu...
More than four decades ago, the Kerner Report chronicled the violent disturbances of the 1960s and p...
Drawing on Wilson (1987), this article assesses two hypotheses concerning the relationship between n...
A longstanding tradition of research linking neighborhood disadvantage to higher rates of violence i...