12 results on '"Wickes, Rebecca"'
Search Results
2. Neighbourhood places, collective efficacy and crime: A longitudinal perspective.
- Author
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Zahnow, Renee, Corcoran, Jonathan, Kimpton, Anthony, and Wickes, Rebecca
- Subjects
NEIGHBORHOODS ,SOCIAL cohesion ,CRIME ,SOCIAL control ,INDUSTRIAL sites ,SOCIAL interaction ,PUBLIC spaces - Abstract
Copyright of Urban Studies (Sage Publications, Ltd.) is the property of Sage Publications, Ltd. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
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- View/download PDF
3. Collective Efficacy in Australian and German Neighborhoods: Testing Cross-Cultural Measurement Equivalence and Structural Correlates in a Multi-level SEM Framework.
- Author
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Gerstner, Dominik, Wickes, Rebecca, and Oberwittler, Dietrich
- Subjects
- *
CULTURAL pluralism , *NEIGHBORHOODS , *SOCIAL control , *STRUCTURAL equation modeling , *MATHEMATICAL equivalence - Abstract
In neighborhood research, the concept of collective efficacy has been particularly successful in capturing social cohesion and behavioral expectations among residents. Research has spread beyond the U.S. where it originated, and many studies from different countries have shown that collective efficacy is related to structural disadvantage in similar ways and affects outcomes as crime, education or health. However, methodological issues about measurement and modeling persist, and no study has yet investigated the cross-cultural measurement equivalence of this scale. We close this gap using two recent neighborhood surveys from Australia and Germany with large samples of respondents (N = ca. 12.800) and neighborhoods (N = ca. 440) in four cities. We employ multilevel structural equation modeling to test for measurement equivalence of collective efficacy across countries and to model its association with concentrated poverty, ethnic diversity, and residential stability. We find that the measurement of collective efficacy is metrically equivalent in both countries, modeling two latent factors on the respondent level—the two components informal social control and social cohesion/trust—but only one latent factor on the neighborhood level. Considering the relationship between the key correlates of collective efficacy, we find broad similarities but also substantial differences across contexts and compared to U.S. research, particularly concerning the role of ethnic diversity which has a stronger diminishing effect in Germany than in Australia. Possible explanations for these differences are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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4. Neighbourhood land use features, collective efficacy and local civic actions.
- Author
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Corcoran, Jonathan, Zahnow, Renee, Wickes, Rebecca, and Hipp, John
- Subjects
NEIGHBORHOODS & society ,LAND use ,SOCIAL control ,SOCIAL interaction ,COMMUNITIES - Abstract
This paper explores the association between neighbourhood land use features and informal social control. More specifically, we examine the extent to which such features in combination with the socio-demographic context of the neighbourhood facilitate or impede collective efficacy and local civic actions. We achieve this through spatially integrating data from the census, topographic databases and a 2012 survey of 4132 residents from 148 neighbourhoods in Brisbane, Australia. The study creates a new classification of a neighbourhood’s physical environment by creating novel categories of land use features that depict social conduits, social holes and social wedges. Social conduits are features of the neighbourhood that facilitate interaction between individuals, social holes are land uses that create situations where there is no occupancy, and social wedges are features that carve up neighbourhoods. We find some evidence to suggest that residents’ reports of collective efficacy are higher in neighbourhoods with a greater density of social conduits. Density of social conduits is also positively associated with local civic action. However, in neighbourhoods with more greenspace, residents are less likely to engage in local civic actions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Responding to Neighborhood Problems: Is the Division of Community Labor Gendered?
- Author
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Wickes, Rebecca, Broidy, Lisa, and Hipp, John R.
- Subjects
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SOCIAL disorganization , *CRIME prevention , *SOCIAL control , *COMMUNITY attitudes , *NEIGHBORHOODS - Abstract
Social disorganization theory positions informal social control as central to neighborhood crime reduction. Although neighborhood ties, fear of crime, and perceived disorder influence the exercise of informal social control, there are significant sex differences for these drivers that might differentially influence men and women's informal social control actions. Furthermore, these differences may be exaggerated under conditions that activate gendered divisions of labor. We use survey data from 4,000 residents in 148 neighborhoods and employ multilevel logistic regression to examine the relationship between sex and informal social control actions. We find that men are more likely to take action than women; however, our three-way interactions reveal family arrangements moderate the relationship between ties, fear of crime, disorder, and these actions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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6. Problems, perceptions and actions: An interdependent process for generating informal social control.
- Author
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Hipp, John R. and Wickes, Rebecca
- Subjects
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NEIGHBORHOODS , *CITIES & towns , *COHESION , *RESIDENTS , *SOCIAL control , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) - Abstract
Using two waves of survey data for residents in neighborhoods in Brisbane, this study explores the interdependent relationship between residents' perceptions of neighboring, cohesion, collective efficacy, neighborhood disorder, and the actions they take to address these problems. Our longitudinal results show that residents’ perceived severity of a problem helps explain engaging in activity to address the problem. People loitering appeared to be the most galvanizing problem for residents, but had particularly deleterious effects on perceptions of cohesion and collective efficacy. We also find that residents who perceive more neighboring in their local area engage in more public and parochial social control activity and residents who live in collectively efficacious neighborhoods are more likely to engage in parochial social control action. Furthermore, residents who themselves perceive more collective efficacy in the neighborhood engage in more parochial or public social control during the subsequent time period. Importantly, we find strong evidence that residents update their sense of collective efficacy. Perceiving more problems in the neighborhood, and perceiving that these problems are increasing, reduced perceptions of neighboring and collective efficacy over time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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7. Neighborhood Guardianship and Property Crime Victimization.
- Author
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Wickes, Rebecca, Zahnow, Renee, Shaefer, Lacey, and Sparkes-Carroll, Michelle
- Subjects
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OFFENSES against property -- Law & legislation , *GUARDIAN & ward , *CRIME victims , *NEIGHBORHOODS , *SOCIAL control - Abstract
In this study, we assess the extent to which the availability of guardians, guardianship expectations, and guardianship actions explain the variation of neighborhood property crime rates and self-reported property crime victimization. Furthermore, we examine whether or not the strength of these relationships is moderated by the neighborhood composition. We use data from the Australian Community Capacity Study (ACCS), a survey of 4,000 respondents from 148 neighborhoods across Brisbane, Australia, and employ regression and multi-level regression techniques. We find that particular aspects of guardianship do protect against crime; however, the relationship between guardianship and crime is influenced by neighborhood diversity, disadvantage, and residential instability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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8. Neighborhood Social Ties and Shared Expectations for Informal Social Control: Do They Influence Informal Social Control Actions?
- Author
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Wickes, Rebecca, Hipp, John, Sargeant, Elise, and Mazerolle, Lorraine
- Subjects
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NEIGHBORHOODS , *SOCIAL control , *SOCIAL interaction , *SOCIAL problems , *COMMUNITIES - Abstract
Objectives: Social disorganization states that neighborhood social ties and shared expectations for informal social control are necessary for the exercise of informal social control actions. Yet this association is largely assumed rather than empirically examined in the literature. This paper examines the relationship between neighborhood social ties, shared expectations for informal social control and actual parochial and public informal social control actions taken by residents in response to big neighborhood problems. Methods: Using multi-level logistic regression models, we integrate Australian Bureau of Statistics census data with the Australian Community Capacity Study survey data of 1310 residents reporting 2614 significant neighborhood problems across 148 neighborhoods to examine specific informal social control actions taken by residents when faced with neighborhood problems. Results: We do not find a relationship between shared expectations for informal social control and residents' informal social control actions. Individual social ties, however, do lead to an increase in informal social control actions in response to 'big' neighborhood problems. Residents with strong ties are more likely to engage in public and parochial informal social control actions than those individuals who lack social ties. Yet individuals living in neighborhoods with high levels of social ties are only moderately more likely to engage in parochial informal social control action than those living in areas where these ties are not present. Shared expectations for informal social control are not associated with the likelihood that residents engage in informal social control actions when faced with a significant neighborhood problem. Conclusion: Neighborhood social ties and shared expectations for informal social control are not unilaterally necessary for the exercise of informal social control actions. Our results challenge contemporary articulations of social disorganization theory that assume that the availability of neighborhood social ties or expectations for action are associated with residents actually doing something to exercise of informal social control. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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9. Policing community problems: Exploring the role of formal social control in shaping collective efficacy.
- Author
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Sargeant, Elise, Wickes, Rebecca, and Mazerolle, Lorraine
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL control , *CRIME prevention , *POLICE intervention , *INFORMERS , *POLICE , *CRIME , *LEGITIMACY of governments , *RESIDENTS - Abstract
Research finds police-led crime control interventions focusing on places and involving partnerships tend to yield positive crime control outcomes. Some scholars argue that these positive outcomes are achieved when police use place-based, partnership-oriented interventions to facilitate and encourage collective efficacy (CE), the corollary being that these CE-enhancing efforts lead to less crime. Nevertheless, differentiating the police activities that impact CE across different types of communities is not well understood. This paper examines the role of police in shaping CE in two contrasting communities. Using in-depth interviews with residents and key informants we find that police are most likely to enhance CE when they foster a sense of effectiveness, use inclusive and partnership-oriented strategies and when they implement strategies in a manner that encourages perceptions of police legitimacy. Moreover, if police can maintain or cultivate a sense of empowerment among community residents, they are more likely to foster CE. Yet the role of police in enhancing CE is different in different community types. We discuss the implications of these findings for policy and practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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10. Generating Action and Responding to Local Issues: Collective Efficacy in Context.
- Author
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Wickes, Rebecca L.
- Subjects
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SOCIAL networks , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *SOCIAL groups , *INTERGROUP relations , *NETWORK effect , *CRIME prevention , *PUBLIC safety , *BURGLARY protection , *SOCIAL control - Abstract
Recent research suggests that communities can be collectively efficacious without dense networks and kith and kinship relations. Yet few studies examine how collective efficacy is generated and sustained in the absence of close social ties. Using in-depth interviews with local residents and key stakeholders in two collectively efficacious suburbs in Brisbane, Australia, this study explores the role of social ties and networks in shaping residents' sense of active engagement and perceptions of community capacity. Results suggest that strong social bonds among residents are not necessary for the development of social cohesion and informal social control. Instead, collective representations or symbols of 'community' provide residents with a sense of social cohesion, trust and a perceived willingness of others to respond to problems of crime and disorder. Yet there is limited evidence that these collectively efficacious communities comprise actively engaged residents. In both communities, participants report a strong reliance on key institutions and organisations to manage and respond to a variety of problems, from neighbourhood nuisances to crime and disorder. These findings suggest a more a nuanced understanding of collective efficacy theory is needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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11. 'Connectedness' and Crime: A Multi-level Examination of Neighborhood Interaction Patterns, Collective Efficacy and Violent and Property Victimization.
- Author
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Wickes, Rebecca and Homel, Ross
- Subjects
CRIME prevention ,CRIME ,SOCIAL control ,VIOLENT crimes ,CRIME victims - Abstract
Recent research indicates that interpersonal ties among neighbors do not necessarily deter or prevent crime in urban communities and, in some circumstances, may actually predict higher crime. Studies in Chicago, Stockholm and several smaller US cities show that it is a community's collective efficacy which more comprehensively explains the relationship between neighborhood social composition and crime levels. Collective efficacy is a task-specific construct that describes community-based mechanisms that facilitate informal social control without necessarily requiring strong ties or associations amongst community members. Using the data from a 2008 survey of approximately 4,000 participants across 160 suburbs in Brisbane, Australia, coupled with crime data provided by the Queensland Police Service and census data, we employ multi-level statistical models to test the significance of affective and instrumental neighborhood interaction in predicting collective efficacy for specific types of crime (violent, property and general delinquency) in an Australian context. We then examine this relationship further by examining their independent effect on levels of self-reported violent and property victimization across the 160 research sites. ..PAT.-Unpublished Manuscript [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
12. Community variations in crime: A multi-level approach to understanding disorder across 82 communities in Australia.
- Author
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Mazerolle, Lorraine, Rombouts, Sacha, Wickes, Rebecca, and McBroom, James
- Subjects
CRIMINAL justice system ,SURVEYS ,DEMOGRAPHIC surveys ,SOCIAL control ,SOCIAL conflict - Abstract
Collective efficacy is a task-specific construct that describes community-based mechanisms that facilitate informal social control without necessarily requiring strong ties or associations amongst community members. Research in Chicago, Stockholm and several smaller US cities has shown that collective efficacy helps to explain the relationship between neighbourhood social composition and crime levels. This paper will explore the role of collective efficacy in explaining community variations in perceptions of violence and disorder in Australia. Using the data from a survey of 2,859 residents across 82 communities in Brisbane coupled with crime data provided by the Queensland Police Service and census data for 2001, we employ multi-level statistical models to depict the importance of collective efficacy in predicting between neighbourhood perceptions of disorder in an Australian context. ..PAT.-Unpublished Manuscript [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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