THE DATA ARE FOR THE NATION'S 32 LARGEST CITIES, FOR THE YEARS 1946-1970. ANALYSIS REVEALS THAT 1970 DATA SUPPORT A CONTENTION THAT CRIME RATES ARE HIGHEST IN LARGE, DENSE, HETEROGENEOUS PLACES; HOWEVER, DATA FROM EARLIER YEARS INDICATE THAT THIS OVERLAP IS A RELATIVELY RECENT PHENOMENON. IT IS SUGGESTED THAT THIS REFLECTS THE PROCESS OF SUBURBANIZATION. SINCE WORLD WAR II, WHITE MIGRATION OUT OF CERTAIN CENTRAL CITIES HAS ENCOURAGED SOCIAL CHANGES WHICH HAVE LED TO THE CURRENT STRATIFICATION OF COMMUNITIES. THIS PROCESS RESEMBLES THAT WHICH LED TO THE FORMATION OF STRATIFIED NEIGHBORHOODS WITHIN CITIES DURING AN EARLIER ERA. THE CURRENT COVARIATION BETWEEN DEMOGRAPHY AND CRIME THUS RESEMBLES THAT FOUND AT THE SUBCOMMUNITY LEVEL 25 YEARS AGO. (AUTHOR ABSTRACT MODIFIED.)
Downloads
Similar Publications
- Structuring Justice: How Prosecutorial Offices Handle Hate Crime Detection and Prosecution
- Characteristics of officer-involved vehicle collisions in California
- Population-level Effects on Crime of Recovering Firearms from Armed Prohibited Persons: Intention-to-treat Analysis of a Pragmatic Cluster-randomised Trial in California Cities