This Essay analyzes trends in violence from a spatial perspective, focusing on how changes in the murder rate are experienced by communities and groups of residents within the city of Chicago. The Essay argues that a spatial perspective is essential to understanding the causes and consequences of violence in the United States and begins by describing the social policies and theoretical mechanisms that explain the connection between concentrated disadvantage and violent crime. The analysis expands on a long tradition of research in Chicago, and it studies the distribution of violence in the city’s neighborhoods from 1965 to 2020. It additionally analyzes how the concentration of violence is overlaid with police violence and incarceration, cr...
Recent declines in homicide in Chicago have been seen as similar to earlier declines in New York Cit...
To many, the city of Chicago conjures up a specter of unremitting urban violence. In 2014, the city ...
While bank investment is a driving force behind neighborhood viability, few studies have directly ex...
A longstanding tradition of research linking neighborhood disadvantage to higher rates of violence i...
Integrating ecological, demographic, and criminological theory, this article examines the role of vi...
This Essay investigates Chicago city-government policy responses to the four largest homicide waves ...
Two historically distinct bodies of research evidence have developed in criminology to understand th...
This thesis attempts to re-think the way lawmakers, policy makers, and everyday Chicagoans look at a...
The homicide rate in Chicago nearly tripled between 1965 and 1992 and subsequently declined by more ...
Objectives: The influence of three hierarchical units of analysis on the total spatial variability o...
This study presents a novel approach to the study of neighborhood effects on crime. In this sense, i...
Homicide rates have remained consistently high in Chicago in spite of a nationwide downward trend in...
Drawing on structural racism and urban disadvantage approaches, this article posits a broad influenc...
Debates regarding the profound rise of urban poverty renewed interest in the influence of neighborho...
Since 2015, homicide rates have increased in several U.S. cities, while remaining stable in many oth...
Recent declines in homicide in Chicago have been seen as similar to earlier declines in New York Cit...
To many, the city of Chicago conjures up a specter of unremitting urban violence. In 2014, the city ...
While bank investment is a driving force behind neighborhood viability, few studies have directly ex...
A longstanding tradition of research linking neighborhood disadvantage to higher rates of violence i...
Integrating ecological, demographic, and criminological theory, this article examines the role of vi...
This Essay investigates Chicago city-government policy responses to the four largest homicide waves ...
Two historically distinct bodies of research evidence have developed in criminology to understand th...
This thesis attempts to re-think the way lawmakers, policy makers, and everyday Chicagoans look at a...
The homicide rate in Chicago nearly tripled between 1965 and 1992 and subsequently declined by more ...
Objectives: The influence of three hierarchical units of analysis on the total spatial variability o...
This study presents a novel approach to the study of neighborhood effects on crime. In this sense, i...
Homicide rates have remained consistently high in Chicago in spite of a nationwide downward trend in...
Drawing on structural racism and urban disadvantage approaches, this article posits a broad influenc...
Debates regarding the profound rise of urban poverty renewed interest in the influence of neighborho...
Since 2015, homicide rates have increased in several U.S. cities, while remaining stable in many oth...
Recent declines in homicide in Chicago have been seen as similar to earlier declines in New York Cit...
To many, the city of Chicago conjures up a specter of unremitting urban violence. In 2014, the city ...
While bank investment is a driving force behind neighborhood viability, few studies have directly ex...