In the 1990s, homicide and violent crime dropped dramatically in New York City but not in Chicago. No single factor can fully explain the reasons for Chicago's persistently high rates of violence. Our data suggest Chicago's homicide rate stayed high while New York City's dropped because of: 1) Continuing disputes over drug markets by Chicago's institutionalized gangs; 2) Police tactics that fractured gang leadership; and 3) Surprisingly, displacement caused by the demolition of public housing Our studies have concluded that a city's housing policy is one crucial component in any effective effort to reduce violence
Since 2015, homicide rates have increased in several U.S. cities, while remaining stable in many oth...
Several studies have shown that crime stimulated population migration to the suburbs (Cullen, J.B. a...
Urban crime rates in the United States fell markedly during the 1990s and remain at historically low...
The past two decades have seen falling homicide rates in Chicago, previously dubbed the ‘murder capi...
Recent declines in homicide in Chicago have been seen as similar to earlier declines in New York Cit...
Researchers, scholars, and policymakers interested in the falling rate of violent crime in New York ...
Recent years have seen Chicago named the ‘murder capital’ of the U.S., echoing its past legacy as a ...
Integrating ecological, demographic, and criminological theory, this article examines the role of vi...
The homicide rate in Chicago nearly tripled between 1965 and 1992 and subsequently declined by more ...
This Essay investigates Chicago city-government policy responses to the four largest homicide waves ...
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...
Homicide rates have remained consistently high in Chicago in spite of a nationwide downward trend in...
Examines the outcomes of relocating public-housing residents to private-market housing while distres...
Despite popular accounts that link public housing demolitions to spatial redistribution of crime, an...
Since 2015, homicide rates have increased in several U.S. cities, while remaining stable in many oth...
Several studies have shown that crime stimulated population migration to the suburbs (Cullen, J.B. a...
Urban crime rates in the United States fell markedly during the 1990s and remain at historically low...
The past two decades have seen falling homicide rates in Chicago, previously dubbed the ‘murder capi...
Recent declines in homicide in Chicago have been seen as similar to earlier declines in New York Cit...
Researchers, scholars, and policymakers interested in the falling rate of violent crime in New York ...
Recent years have seen Chicago named the ‘murder capital’ of the U.S., echoing its past legacy as a ...
Integrating ecological, demographic, and criminological theory, this article examines the role of vi...
The homicide rate in Chicago nearly tripled between 1965 and 1992 and subsequently declined by more ...
This Essay investigates Chicago city-government policy responses to the four largest homicide waves ...
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...
Homicide rates have remained consistently high in Chicago in spite of a nationwide downward trend in...
Examines the outcomes of relocating public-housing residents to private-market housing while distres...
Despite popular accounts that link public housing demolitions to spatial redistribution of crime, an...
Since 2015, homicide rates have increased in several U.S. cities, while remaining stable in many oth...
Several studies have shown that crime stimulated population migration to the suburbs (Cullen, J.B. a...
Urban crime rates in the United States fell markedly during the 1990s and remain at historically low...