A longstanding tradition of research linking neighborhood disadvantage to higher rates of violence is based on the characteristics of where people reside. This Essay argues that we need to look beyond residential neighborhoods to consider flows of movement throughout the wider metropolis. Our basic premise is that a neighborhood’s well-being depends not only on its own socioeconomic conditions but also on the conditions of neighborhoods that its residents visit and are visited by—connections that form through networks of everyday urban mobility. Based on the analysis of large-scale urban-mobility data, we find that while residents of both advantaged and disadvantaged neighborhoods in Chicago travel far and wide, their relative isolation by ...
In this paper, we consider neighborhood selection as a social process central to the reproduction of...
We look at at the empirical validity of Schelling’s models for racial residential segregation applie...
This paper is concerned with stability and change in neighborhoods in large metropolitan areas. Duri...
A longstanding tradition of research linking neighborhood disadvantage to higher rates of violence i...
This Essay analyzes trends in violence from a spatial perspective, focusing on how changes in the mu...
Debates regarding the profound rise of urban poverty renewed interest in the influence of neighborho...
Integrating ecological, demographic, and criminological theory, this article examines the role of vi...
This study presents a novel approach to the study of neighborhood effects on crime. In this sense, i...
Drawing on structural racism and urban disadvantage approaches, this article posits a broad influenc...
How can we understand the dramatic linkages among race, ethnicity, place, and violence in the United...
In cities around the globe, there exists a significant correlation between racial residential segreg...
Purpose: Prior studies have largely been unable to account for how variations in inequality across l...
The homicide rate in Chicago nearly tripled between 1965 and 1992 and subsequently declined by more ...
Crime and violence in the cities of the United States has been an issue since cities first emerged. ...
Residential landscapes throughout the urban United States have long been associated with high levels...
In this paper, we consider neighborhood selection as a social process central to the reproduction of...
We look at at the empirical validity of Schelling’s models for racial residential segregation applie...
This paper is concerned with stability and change in neighborhoods in large metropolitan areas. Duri...
A longstanding tradition of research linking neighborhood disadvantage to higher rates of violence i...
This Essay analyzes trends in violence from a spatial perspective, focusing on how changes in the mu...
Debates regarding the profound rise of urban poverty renewed interest in the influence of neighborho...
Integrating ecological, demographic, and criminological theory, this article examines the role of vi...
This study presents a novel approach to the study of neighborhood effects on crime. In this sense, i...
Drawing on structural racism and urban disadvantage approaches, this article posits a broad influenc...
How can we understand the dramatic linkages among race, ethnicity, place, and violence in the United...
In cities around the globe, there exists a significant correlation between racial residential segreg...
Purpose: Prior studies have largely been unable to account for how variations in inequality across l...
The homicide rate in Chicago nearly tripled between 1965 and 1992 and subsequently declined by more ...
Crime and violence in the cities of the United States has been an issue since cities first emerged. ...
Residential landscapes throughout the urban United States have long been associated with high levels...
In this paper, we consider neighborhood selection as a social process central to the reproduction of...
We look at at the empirical validity of Schelling’s models for racial residential segregation applie...
This paper is concerned with stability and change in neighborhoods in large metropolitan areas. Duri...