1,082 results on '"NEIGHBORHOODS & society"'
Search Results
202. The Joint Effects of Interest in Neighborhood & Community Issues & Interpersonal Communication on the Relationship Between Local Media Use & Sources of Social Capital.
- Author
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Thorson, Esther and Fleming, Kenneth
- Subjects
LOCAL mass media ,MASS media use ,SOCIAL capital ,COMMUNITY involvement ,NEIGHBORHOODS & society - Abstract
This study explores the mechanisms that better explain the relationship between mass media and sources of social capital than what has been accomplished in previous research. We examine the effects of local news media, informational use of the Internet, and entertainment media use on sources of social capital, along with interest in neighborhood and community issues and interpersonal communication. Hierarchical regression analyses of a telephone survey data (n=546) show that the influence of local news media on sources of social capital was best reflected in their links to interest and interpersonal communication. In other words, the effects of local newspaper and television news on sources of social capital were mediated by interest in neighborhood and community issues and interpersonal communication. Searching information via the Internet was positively related to associational membership, even after controls of demographic and structural variables, interest, and interpersonal communication, whereas entertainment media use was not a predictor at all. The findings then suggest that use of local news media works through the values of self-interest in neighborhood and community issues and interpersonal communication to influence sources of social capital at the individual level. ..PAT.-Conference Proceeding [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
203. The Material and Ideational Elements of Place: Place as Cultural Construct.
- Author
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Campbell, Christopher D.
- Subjects
NEIGHBORHOODS & society ,RESIDENCE requirements ,COMMUNITY relations ,CULTURAL nationalism - Abstract
Drawing upon a series of in-depth interviews with residents of a Los Angeles neighborhood, the author shows how material and ideational elements both play important but very different roles in the construction of local place images. The author formalizes these roles in a model that bridges a divide between traditionally subjective, "centered" views of place and objective, "decentered" views. ..PAT.-Unpublished Manuscript [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
204. Local Institutions, Crime, and Social Control: A Mixed-Methods Approach.
- Author
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Powers, Erin
- Subjects
NEIGHBORHOODS & society ,SOCIAL disorganization ,COMMUNITY change ,QUALITATIVE research ,NEIGHBORHOOD change ,COMMUNITY safety - Abstract
The article reports that there are considerable evidence that local context, often conceived of in terms of the neighborhood, exercises an influence on a variety of social and health outcomes, including crime. Social disorganization theory is the primary lens through which the relationship between neighborhoods and crime has been assessed. Although there has been extensive quantitative testing of the theory, and replication in different cities, there remains some ambiguity about the mechanisms hypothesized to drive neighborhood effects: notably local informal social control and collective efficacy.
- Published
- 2005
205. an extract from Martutene.
- Author
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Saizabitoria, Ramon
- Subjects
NEIGHBORHOODS & society - Abstract
An excerpt from the book "Martutene" by Ramon Saizabitoria along with Aritz Branton is presented which discusses social condition of citizens in Martutene neighbourhood of Spain.
- Published
- 2016
206. A NEW MEASURE OF AGE-FRIENDLINESS.
- Author
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Lynott, Jana
- Subjects
COMMUNITIES -- Services for ,NEIGHBORHOODS & society - Abstract
The article discusses the an innovative tool used to analyse the services and amenities that impact people's lives in every neighborhood and community in the U.S. known as the "Livability Index" developed by the American Association of Retired Persons (AARP).
- Published
- 2016
207. the gentrifier.
- Author
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GREEN, JOSH
- Subjects
GENTRIFICATION ,NEIGHBORHOODS & society ,URBAN life ,SOCIAL history ,RACE relations - Abstract
The article focuses on the factors contributing to gentrification in the neighborhood of Kirkwood in Atlanta, Georgia. Topics discussed include the cycle of displacement in the city as well as the proximity of the neighborhood to the city's business center. The harmonious relationship of residents from various racial and cultural backgrounds and efforts to reduce the crime rate are mentioned.
- Published
- 2016
208. Chapter 40: Durable Inequality.
- Author
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Sampson, Robert J. and Morenoff, Jeffrey D.
- Subjects
NEIGHBORHOODS & society ,POVERTY - Abstract
Chapter 40 of the book "Social Stratification: Class, Race, and Gender in Sociological Perspective," Third edition, edited by David B. Grusky, Manwai C. Ku and Szonja Szelényi is presented. It explores the persistence of poverty in the neighborhoods in Chicago, Illinois including spatial dynamics and social processes or durable inequality. It highlights a study which determines the impact of the adoption of structural dynamics to the deepening of poverty in urban neighborhoods.
- Published
- 2000
209. Chapter 39: Neighborhoods, Poverty, and Children's Well-Being.
- Author
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Pebley, Anne R. and Sastry, Narayan
- Subjects
NEIGHBORHOODS & society ,SOCIAL conditions of children ,WELL-being - Abstract
Chapter 39 of the book "Social Stratification: Class, Race, and Gender in Sociological Perspective," Third edition, edited by David B. Grusky, Manwai C. Ku and Szonja Szelényi is presented. It explores the effect of neighborhood characteristics such as poverty and crime to the well-being of children and their families. It highlights studies which attempted to tackle the issue of endogenous neighborhood selection and its issues that makes it complex and difficult to observe.
- Published
- 2000
210. The puzzling neglect of Hispanic Americans in research on police–citizen relations.
- Author
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Weitzer, Ronald
- Subjects
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POLICE , *SOCIAL conditions of Hispanic Americans , *MINORITIES , *RACE & society , *AFRICAN American social conditions , *WHITE people , *ETHNICITY & society , *ETHNICITY , *IMMIGRANTS , *SOCIAL conditions of immigrants , *CITIZENS , *NEIGHBORHOODS & society , *HISPANIC Americans , *TWENTY-first century , *SOCIAL history ,UNITED States social conditions - Abstract
Most studies of police–minority relations in America focus on blacks, usually in comparison with whites. This pattern is particularly puzzling in light of the growing population of Hispanic Americans throughout the US, now outnumbering blacks and consisting of the majority in some major cities. Aside from the need for more empirical research on the policing of Hispanics per se, comparing Hispanics’ relations with the police to other racial and ethnic groups offers some important insights into both the dimensions that are shared across groups and those that are distinctive to Hispanics. This article critically evaluates the small body of empirical research literature on this topic – highlighting both deficiencies in this literature as well as suggestive findings – and concludes by identifying a set of issues that should be addressed in future studies. The available evidence largely supports a racial-hierarchy perspective with regard to the policing of different racial and ethnic groups in the US. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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211. Trajectories of middle-class belonging: The dynamics of place attachment and classed identities.
- Author
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Benson, Michaela
- Subjects
- *
MIDDLE class , *SOCIAL mobility , *GROUP identity , *SOCIAL classes , *HOUSING , *SOCIAL belonging , *NEIGHBORHOODS & society ,SOCIAL aspects ,SOCIAL conditions in England - Abstract
This paper examines the processes by which middle-class belonging is generated, through the exploration of social and spatial trajectories in narratives of residential choice and mobility. It is based on an understanding of residential choice as indicative and constitutive of social mobilities. In particular the paper builds on the discussion of the match between habitus and field that lies at the root of the notions of middle-class belonging and place attachments to draw attention not only to the conditions under which ‘fit’ is possible, but also acknowledge that belonging is a dynamic process, generated and maintained through residence that feeds back into understandings of classed identities. This paper argues that residential space is not just appropriated to reflect pre-existing tastes and lifestyles, but may also contribute in the transformation of habitus to fit to particular neighbourhoods and ways of living. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
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212. Culture and authenticity in urban regeneration processes: Place branding in central Barcelona.
- Author
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Rius Ulldemolins, Joaquim
- Subjects
- *
PLACE marketing , *URBAN growth , *CULTURAL policy , *POST-Fordism , *CITY promotion , *URBAN renewal , *POSTINDUSTRIAL societies , *MUNICIPAL government , *NEIGHBORHOODS & society , *MIDDLE class - Abstract
In the post-Fordist economy, culture has become an important resource for cities to compete at the regional and international levels. Thus, local elites have used culture as an instrument of urban regeneration and these processes increasingly seek to promote urban branding. Moreover, culture is seen as a way to generate narratives that help cities avoid the perception of standardisation, characterise cities as a unique urban space and create authenticity, which are necessary elements if a city is to be globally competitive. The case of central Barcelona and, specifically, the Raval district is exemplary and singular: the joint action of the cultural institutions and representatives of the cultural sector based in the neighbourhood have turned the Raval into an brand space of ‘authentic Barcelona’ that makes the official, tourist-frequented Barcelona more rich and complex. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
213. Incentives and opportunities: A complexity-oriented explanation of violent ethnic conflict.
- Author
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Bara, Corinne
- Subjects
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ETHNIC conflict , *QUALITATIVE research , *VIOLENCE , *POLITICAL stability , *NATURAL resources , *POVERTY , *NEIGHBORHOODS & society , *FORECASTING - Abstract
Existing research on the causes of violent ethnic conflict is characterized by an enduring debate on whether these conflicts are the result of deeply felt grievances or the product of an opportunity structure in which rebellion is an attractive and/or viable option. This article argues that the question of whether incentive- or opportunity-based explanations of conflict have more explanatory power is fundamentally misguided, as conflict is more likely the result of a complex interaction of both. The fact is, however, that there is little generalized knowledge about these interactions. This study aims to fill this gap and applies crisp-set Qualitative Comparative Analysis (QCA) in order to identify constellations of risk factors that are conducive to ethnic conflict. The results demonstrate the explanatory leverage gained by taking causal complexity in the form of risk patterns into account. It takes no more than four different configurations of a total of eight conditions to reliably explain almost two-thirds of all ethnic conflict onsets between 1990 and 2009. Moreover, these four configurations are quasi-sufficient for onset, leading to conflict in 88% of all cases covered. The QCA model generated in this article also fares well in predicting conflicts in-sample and out-of-sample, with the in-sample predictions being more precise than those generated by a simple binary logistic regression. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
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214. Assessment of Neighborhood Context in a Nationally Representative Study.
- Author
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Cornwell, Erin York and Cagney, Kathleen A.
- Subjects
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NEIGHBORHOODS & society , *SOCIAL cohesion , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *SOCIAL integration , *OLDER people & social media - Abstract
Objectives. This paper introduces new measures of neighborhood context that are included in the second wave of the National Social Life, Health, and Aging Project (NSHAP). We describe the use of field interviewer ratings of respondents' neighborhood conditions, as well as the adaptation of existing measures for the assessment of neighborhood social context among urban and nonurban older adults. Method. We construct scales of neighborhood problems, neighborhood social cohesion, neighborhood social ties, and perceived neighborhood danger, and assess their reliability and validity. We then calculate descriptive statistics for measures of neighborhood context across respondent age, gender, and racial/ethnic background, and across low-, moderate-, and high-density residential blocks. Results. We find that older women report greater neighborhood cohesion and more neighborhood ties than older men, but women also perceive more neighborhood danger. Black and Hispanic older adults reside in neighborhoods with more problems, lower cohesion, fewer social ties, and greater perceived danger. Neighborhood characteristics also vary across residential densities. Neighborhood problems and perceived danger increase with block-level density, but neighborhood social cohesion and social ties were lowest among residents of moderate-density blocks. Discussion. The inclusion of neighborhood context measures in the second wave of NSHAP provides a unique opportunity to explore associations among neighborhood context, social connectedness, and indicators of health and function among older adults. We discuss limitations of the measures and provide recommendations for their use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
215. Inequality from the top down and bottom up: towards a revised Wacquant.
- Author
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Sampson, Robert J.
- Subjects
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EQUALITY & society , *STATE, The , *IMPRISONMENT , *VIOLENCE , *PUNISHMENT , *SOCIAL classes , *AFRICAN American social conditions , *NEIGHBORHOODS & society , *CRIME , *HISTORY , *VIOLENCE & society , *AFRICAN American history , *POLITICAL attitudes ,SOCIAL aspects ,UNITED States social conditions, 1945- - Abstract
In this response I focus on two major themes in Wacquant's trilogy: (1) punishment and the state; and (2) territorial stigmatization. I discuss evidence that supports elements of Wacquant's argument, while at the same time demonstrating the need for an account that brings mediating institutional processes of the state, violence, the civil sphere and neighbourhood mechanisms more fully into the larger theoretical picture. I conclude that ‘bottom-up’ processes of inequality must be integrated with ‘top-down’ forces of the state to advance our theoretical understanding of penality and spatial marginality in federated and unitary governments alike. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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216. Coached for the Classroom: Parents’ Cultural Transmission and Children’s Reproduction of Educational Inequalities.
- Author
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Calarco, Jessica McCrory
- Subjects
- *
PARENT-child relationships , *EDUCATIONAL coaching , *CLASSROOM environment , *EDUCATION & society , *EQUALITY & society , *SOCIAL classes , *BEHAVIOR -- Social aspects , *WORKING class , *MIDDLE class , *PARENTING & society , *NEIGHBORHOODS & society , *SCHOOL environment , *SOCIALIZATION , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH funding , *QUALITATIVE research , *CULTURAL values , *FAMILY relations , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *EDUCATIONAL attainment , *CHILDREN , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Scholars typically view class socialization as an implicit process. This study instead shows how parents actively transmit class-based cultures to children and how these lessons reproduce inequalities. Through observations and interviews with children, parents, and teachers, I found that middle- and working-class parents expressed contrasting beliefs about appropriate classroom behavior, beliefs that shaped parents’ cultural coaching efforts. These efforts led children to activate class-based problem-solving strategies, which generated stratified profits at school. By showing how these processes vary along social class lines, this study reveals a key source of children’s class-based behaviors and highlights the efforts by which parents and children together reproduce inequalities. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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217. Interethnic attitudes in urban neighbourhoods: The impact of neighbourhood disorder and decline.
- Author
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Havekes, Esther, Coenders, Marcel, and Dekker, Karien
- Subjects
- *
NEIGHBORHOOD change , *ETHNIC relations , *SOCIAL disorganization , *MINORITIES , *NEIGHBORHOODS & society , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *SCAPEGOAT , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *SOCIAL history ,HISTORY of the Netherlands, 1945- - Abstract
Previous studies of the relationship between interethnic attitudes and the ethnic composition of neighbourhoods have overlooked the impact of neighbourhood problems in ethnically concentrated neighbourhoods. This paper examines the influence of neighbourhood disorder and decline (i.e. increasing disorder) on interethnic attitudes, controlling for the ethnic composition of the neighbourhood. Neighbourhood disorder and decline are measured by indicators of social and physical neighbourhood problems. Additionally, we examine the extent to which the impact of (increasing) disorder on interethnic attitudes depends on the particular ethnic composition of the neighbourhood. Using a geocoded data set covering 1435 neighbourhoods in The Netherlands, we analyse interethnic attitudes among four ethnic minority groups and the native Dutch population. Multilevel analyses show that for both ethnic minority and native Dutch residents neighbourhood decline is associated with negative attitudes towards ethnic minority groups, particularly in neighbourhoods with many ethnic minority residents. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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218. ‘We don’t have no neighbourhood’: Advanced marginality and urban agriculture in Detroit.
- Author
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Draus, Paul Joseph, Roddy, Juliette, and McDuffie, Anthony
- Subjects
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SOCIAL marginality , *URBAN agriculture , *NEIGHBORHOODS & society , *ETHNOLOGY , *POSTINDUSTRIAL societies , *SOCIAL disorganization , *DEMOGRAPHIC change , *RACE , *ECONOMICS , *SOCIAL history , *ECONOMIC history - Abstract
This paper is based on qualitative interviews (n=20) conducted with individuals working or residing within a heavily depopulated section of the city of Detroit. This area is the projected site of an urban agriculture (UA) project, which proposes to utilise vacant land and economically marginalised residents to produce marketable products and services. With a few exceptions, neighbourhood respondents had little hope of improvement occurring in the neighbourhood anytime soon, and few expectations for UA to alter the daily life or social dynamic of the area. These findings are framed and interpreted using Wacquant’s (1999) concept of advanced marginality and Sampson’s (2012) arguments concerning neighbourhood effects. While some neighbourhood improvement efforts were viewed positively, others were regarded with intense suspicion, indicating that idealistic UA efforts may have some work to do in terms of engaging residents and offsetting legacies of displacement as well as on-going marginalisation. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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219. Diversity and Out-Group Attitudes in the Netherlands: The Role of Authoritarianism and Social Threat in the Neighbourhood.
- Author
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Van Assche, Jasper, Roets, Arne, Dhont, Kristof, and Van Hiel, Alain
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL conditions of immigrants , *AUTHORITARIANISM , *IMMIGRANTS , *NEIGHBORHOODS & society , *CULTURAL pluralism , *PUBLIC opinion on emigration & immigration , *TWENTY-first century , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *SOCIAL history ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
Previous studies have obtained divergent findings for the association between ethnic diversity and majority members' attitudes towards immigrants, suggesting that this relationship is moderated by individual or contextual difference variables. In a community sample of Dutch citizens (N = 399), we investigated the role of two potential moderators: right-wing authoritarianism and social threat in the local neighbourhood. Moreover, we assessed diversity and social threat in the neighbourhood with both subjective and objective measures. The results indicated that diversity was negatively related to positive attitudes towards immigrants among high authoritarians and among people experiencing their immediate environment as threatening. Conversely, diversity was positively related to out-group attitudes among low authoritarian individuals and among people residing in more secure neighbourhoods. The theoretical and practical implications of these person–environment and environment–environment interactions are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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220. Neighborhood Reputation and Resident Sentiment in the Wake of the Las Vegas Foreclosure Crisis.
- Author
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Pais, Jeremy, Batson, Christie D., and Monnat, Shannon M.
- Subjects
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NEIGHBORHOOD change , *RESIDENTS , *FORECLOSURE , *NEIGHBORHOODS & society , *SELF-efficacy , *SOCIAL order , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *SOCIAL history , *ECONOMIC history ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
This study examines how two major components of a neighborhood’s reputation—perceived disorder and collective efficacy—shape individuals’ sentiments toward their neighborhoods during a foreclosure crisis. Of central interest are whether neighborhood reputations are durable in the face of a crisis (neighborhood resiliency hypothesis) or whether neighborhood reputations wane during times of duress (foreclosure crisis hypothesis). Geo-coded individual-level data from the Las Vegas Metropolitan Area Social Survey merged with data on census tract foreclosure rates are used to address this question. The results provide qualified support for both perspectives. In support of the neighborhood resiliency hypothesis, collective efficacy is positively associated with how residents feel about the quality of their neighborhoods, and this relationship is unaltered by foreclosure rates. In support of the foreclosure crisis hypothesis, foreclosure rates mediate the effects of neighborhood disorder on resident sentiment. The implications of these findings for community resiliency are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
221. THE JEWISH PRESENCE ON DETROIT'S CHENE STREET.
- Author
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KRZYZOWSKI, MARIAN J.
- Subjects
NEIGHBORHOODS & society ,AMERICAN Jewish history ,AMERICAN business enterprises ,IMMIGRANTS ,HISTORY of Detroit, Mich. ,ECONOMIC history ,TWENTIETH century ,INDUSTRIES & society - Abstract
The article discusses the history of the Chene Street neighborhood of Detroit, Michigan, focusing on the history of the Jewish presence there during the 20th century. Other topics include the role of Polish, Jewish, Italian, and Arab immigrants in developing businesses on Chene Street, information on the Chene Street History Study, and information on immigrant families from Chene Street including the Levenson Family, the Bloch Family, and the Friedman Family.
- Published
- 2014
222. Ethnic diversity, segregation and the social cohesion of neighbourhoods in London.
- Author
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Sturgis, Patrick, Brunton-Smith, Ian, Kuha, Jouni, and Jackson, Jonathan
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL cohesion , *CULTURAL pluralism , *NEIGHBORHOODS & society , *HOUSING discrimination , *COMMUNITIES , *ETHNIC relations , *ETHNIC groups , *TWENTY-first century ,SOCIAL aspects ,SOCIAL conditions in England - Abstract
The question of whether and how ethnic diversity affects the social cohesion of communities has become an increasingly prominent and contested topic of academic and political debate. In this paper we focus on a single city: London. As possibly the most ethnically diverse conurbation on the planet, London serves as a particularly suitable test-bed for theories about the effects of ethnic heterogeneity on prosocial attitudes. We find neighbourhood ethnic diversity in London to be positively related to the perceived social cohesion of neighbourhood residents, once the level of economic deprivation is accounted for. Ethnic segregation within neighbourhoods, on the other hand, is associated with lower levels of perceived social cohesion. Both effects are strongly moderated by the age of individual residents: diversity has a positive effect on social cohesion for young people but this effect dissipates in older age groups; the reverse pattern is found for ethnic segregation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
223. Interaction Pretext: Experiences of Community in the Urban Neighbourhood.
- Author
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Henriksen, Ida Marie and Tjora, Aksel
- Subjects
- *
NEIGHBORHOODS & society , *SOCIAL cohesion , *CITIES & towns , *SOCIAL interaction , *COMMUNITIES , *SOCIAL capital , *NEIGHBORS , *RECREATION , *SOCIAL history , *MANNERS & customs ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
It has been suggested that community, social cohesion and territorial ties in neighbourhoods may be characterised by three directions: the lost, the saved and the transformed. On the basis of a number of case studies in a Norwegian city, it is found that these three trends exist together, on the basis of various local interactive practices. The concept of an interaction pretext is developed to answer in a more nuanced way how various forms of social ties are developed, maintained and/or altered. By combining this concept with local activity, four community types are specified that may characterise different neighbourhoods and that may also exist in parallel at one place: the passing-by community, the tight community, the weak community, and the split community. Demonstrating the potential of a more detailed empirical approach to the community question, the paper warns against too analytically shallow suggestions about their development. By understanding how neighbourhoods develop socially in different ways, it may be possible to increase the probability of better community planning. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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224. Acculturation Preferences of the Turkish Second Generation in 11 European Cities.
- Author
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Groenewold, George, de Valk, Helga A.G., and van Ginneken, Jeroen
- Subjects
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TURKS , *ACCULTURATION , *SOCIAL conditions of children of immigrants , *NEIGHBORHOODS & society , *SOCIAL isolation , *SOCIAL integration , *SOCIAL marginality , *CITIES & towns , *DEMOGRAPHIC change , *SOCIAL history , *GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
This article examines acculturation preferences of the Turkish second generation in 11 European cities and compares these with expectations of national society comparison group members. Multiple classification analysis (MCA) was used to examine the effects of city of residence, exposure to national society value system, cultural distance, social exclusion and neighbourhood quality on acculturation preferences. MCA was also applied to profile respondents according to background characteristics and dominant acculturation preference style, which is useful for both theory development and design of integration policies for specific target groups. Results show that the majority of the second generation maintain integration preferences, although sub-groups with particular background characteristics such as low educational attainment, experiencing discrimination and living in a low-quality neighbourhood, maintain separation or marginalisation preferences. Contextual factors, notably city of residence, the proxy for national integration policy orientation, seemed more important in explaining acculturation preferences than individual-level factors. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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225. The Impacts of LRT, Neighbourhood Characteristics, and Self-selection on Auto Ownership: Evidence from Minneapolis-St. Paul.
- Author
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Cao, Jason and Cao, Xiaoshu
- Subjects
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STREET railroads , *AUTOMOBILE ownership , *COMMUNITY development , *NEIGHBORHOODS & society , *BUILT environment , *STREETS , *TRANSPORTATION & society - Abstract
There is a growing interest in exploring the relationships between the built environment and auto ownership and a number of studies have investigated the impact of rail transit on travel behaviour. However, few have disentangled the impact of rail transit on auto ownership from the influences of the built environment and residential self-selection. Using the light rail transit (LRT) in the Minneapolis-St. Paul metropolitan area, USA, this study applies the statistical control approach and quasi-longitudinal design to examine the effects of LRT, neighbourhood design and self-selection on auto ownership. It is found that residential self-selection influences auto ownership; backyard size, off-street parking and business density marginally affect auto ownership; and the LRT does not have an independent impact on auto ownership beyond neighbourhood design and self-selection. The results point to the importance of neighbourhood design in rail transit development. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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226. Mapping the Trajectory of Socioeconomic Disparity in Working Memory: Parental and Neighborhood Factors.
- Author
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Hackman, Daniel A., Betancourt, Laura M., Gallop, Robert, Romer, Daniel, Brodsky, Nancy L., Hurt, Hallam, and Farah, Martha J.
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL status , *SHORT-term memory , *CHILD research , *NEIGHBORHOODS & society , *EDUCATION of parents , *CHILD development - Abstract
Working memory ( WM) is positively correlated with socioeconomic status ( SES). It is not clear, however, if SES predicts the rate of WM development over time or whether SES effects are specific to family rather than neighborhood SES. A community sample of children ( n = 316) enrolled between ages 10 and 13 completed four annual assessments of WM. Lower parental education, but not neighborhood disadvantage, was associated with worse WM performance. Neither measure of SES was associated with the rate of developmental change. Consequently, the SES disparity in WM is not a developmental lag that narrows or an accumulating effect that becomes more pronounced. Rather, the relation between family SES and WM originates earlier in childhood and is stable through adolescence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
227. The Impact of Victimization and Witnessing Violence on Physical Aggression Among High-Risk Adolescents.
- Author
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Farrell, Albert D., Mehari, Krista R., Kramer‐Kuhn, Alison, and Goncy, Elizabeth A.
- Subjects
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CHILD witnesses , *CHILDREN & violence , *AT-risk students , *NEIGHBORHOODS & society , *CRIME victims - Abstract
Relations among witnessing violence, victimization, and physical aggression were investigated within a high-risk sample of 1,156 sixth graders. Longitudinal, multilevel analyses were conducted on two waves of data from two cohorts of students in 37 schools from four communities. The sample was 65% male and 67% African American. Neighborhood concentrated disadvantage, witnessing violence, victimization, and physical aggression were strongly and positively correlated at the school level. Contrary to hypothesis, exposure to violence did not mediate the effects of neighborhood concentrated disadvantage on changes in physical aggression. As expected, witnessing violence and physical aggression had bidirectional longitudinal effects on each other at the student level. In contrast, there were no cross-variable relations between changes in violent victimization and aggression over time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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228. "I Am a Nasty Branch Kid": Women's Memories of Place in the Era of Asheville's Urban Renewal.
- Author
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JUDSON, SARAH
- Subjects
- *
COLLECTIVE memory , *PLACE (Philosophy) , *URBAN renewal , *AFRICAN Americans , *AMERICAN women , *NEIGHBORHOODS & society , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY , *PSYCHOLOGY , *SOCIAL history - Abstract
An essay is presented which discusses women's memories of Asheville, North Carolina's urban renewal from the 1950s through the 1970s, including in regard to their memory of place. The article frequently references interviews conducted with Asheville women. An overview of the East End/Valley Street neighborhood and community, including the African American residents within it, is provided.
- Published
- 2014
229. Brother can you Spare a Ride? Carpooling in Immigrant Neighbourhoods.
- Author
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Blumenberg, Evelyn and Smart, Michael
- Subjects
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CARPOOLS , *IMMIGRANTS , *NEIGHBORHOODS & society , *SOCIAL networks , *COMMUTING - Abstract
Immigrants are more likely to travel by carpool than the US-born. Strong ethnic ties within immigrant communities may contribute to immigrants’ propensity to carpool, enabling residents to find carpool partners more easily and increasing the likelihood that residents will travel to and from common destinations. Drawing on data from the 2000 US census and a 2001 regional travel survey, this paper examines whether residents of ethnic neighbourhoods in Southern California are more likely to carpool than other residents. A strong positive relationship is found between the percentage foreign-born in a census tract and carpooling rates. Analysis of individual data shows that this relationship is strongest for immigrants who live in immigrant neighbourhoods; immigrants living in non-immigrant neighbourhoods are less likely to carpool. These findings suggest an important role for social networks in travel behaviour and the potential benefits of linking land use to the specific needs of local residents. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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230. Composite Geographical Context and School Choice Attitudes in Sweden: A Study Based on Individually Defined, Scalable Neighborhoods.
- Author
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Malmberg, Bo, Andersson, Eva K., and Bergsten, Zara
- Subjects
- *
SCHOOL choice , *HUMAN geography , *NEIGHBORHOODS & society , *PARENT attitudes , *DECISION making , *PSYCHOLOGY of parents , *SOCIAL classes - Abstract
This article contributes both to the expanding literature on the effect of school choice and to the literature focusing on how to measure and conceptualize neighborhood effects. It uses a novel approach to the measurement of geographical context to analyze neighborhood influences on school choice attitudes among Swedish parents. Data on attitudes come from a survey of 3,749 families with children in upper primary school. Geographical context is measured using multi-scalar contextual factors based on socioeconomic indicators for individually defined, bespoke neighborhoods that incorporate from 12 to 12,800 people. The results show that parental motives for choosing schools in Sweden are strongly influenced by the social and ethnic composition of their own and their adjacent neighborhoods. Contrary to most other studies, we find effects of socioeconomic context stronger than the effects of the parents’ own social and ethnic background. Thus, parents living in academic, high-income areas put little stress on attending an assigned school, close-to-home schools, or stating that the municipality has influenced their decision. Furthermore, these attitudes become even stronger if nearby neighborhoods are dominated by visible minorities and disadvantaged groups. Supported by Sampson's ideas of coordinated perceptions among inhabitants in the same neighborhoods, we explain these surprisingly strong contextual effects with the idea that school choice motives are especially sensitive to neighbors’ ideas and easily influenced as measured preferences in a survey. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2014
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231. The influence of neighborhood characteristics on police officers' encounters with persons suspected to have a serious mental illness.
- Author
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Krishan, Shaily, Bakeman, Roger, Broussard, Beth, Cristofaro, Sarah L., Hankerson-Dyson, Dana, Husbands, Letheshia, Watson, Amy C., and Compton, Michael T.
- Subjects
- *
POLICE attitudes , *POLICE brutality , *NEIGHBORHOODS & society , *CITIES & towns , *PEOPLE with mental illness - Abstract
Abstract: Objective: Police officers' decisions and behaviors are impacted by the neighborhood context in which police encounters occur. For example, officers may use greater force and be more likely to make arrests in disadvantaged neighborhoods. We examined whether neighborhood characteristics influence police encounters with individuals suspected to have a serious mental illness, addictive disorder, or developmental disability. Method: We obtained data on 916 encounters from 166 officers in six jurisdictions in Georgia, USA and abstracted geographical data pertaining to the location of these encounters from United States Decennial Census data. Encounters were nested within 163 census tracts. Officer-reported data covered general encounter characteristics, the officer's perception of the subject's condition, subject demographics, use of force, and disposition of the encounter (e.g., arrest v. referral or transport to treatment services). Geographical data included 17 variables representing population and housing characteristics of the census tracts, from which three indices pertaining to neighborhood income, stability, and immigration status were derived using factor-analytic techniques. We then examined associations of these indices with various encounter-related variables using multi-level analysis. Results: Encounters taking place in higher-income and higher-stability census tracts were more likely to be dispatch-initiated and take place in a private home compared to those in lower-income and lower-stability neighborhoods. In higher-income neighborhoods, encounters were more likely to involve a subject suspected to have a mental illness (as opposed to an addictive disorder or developmental disability) and less likely to involve a subject suspected to have alcohol problems. The officer's level of force used was not associated with neighborhood factors. Regarding disposition, although the likelihood of arrest was unrelated to neighborhood characteristics, encounters taking place in higher-immigrant neighborhoods were more likely to result in referral or transport to services than those in lower-immigrant neighborhoods. Conclusion: Neighborhood characteristics are important to consider in research on police interactions with individuals with serious mental illnesses, addictive disorders, or developmental disabilities. Such research could inform departmental training policies and procedures based on the needs of the jurisdictions served. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2014
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232. How Does Islamist Local Governance Affect the Lives of Women?
- Author
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Blaydes, Lisa
- Subjects
- *
WOMEN in Islam , *LOCAL government -- Social aspects , *ISLAMISTS , *21ST century social conditions of women , *ISLAM & culture , *NEIGHBORHOODS & society , *ISLAM & politics , *WOMEN'S programs , *REPRODUCTIVE health , *TWENTY-first century , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *RELIGION , *SOCIAL history - Abstract
How do women fare under rule by Islamists? Whereas some scholarly work suggests that Islamists are effective at providing the type of social services that benefit women most, other studies contend that Islamic groups support 'pro-male' policies and cultural interventions that disadvantage the well-being of women. In order to adjudicate between these views, I compare two neighborhoods in Greater Cairo that are similar on a number of dimensions but in one, a militant Islamist group came to dominate local politics, whereas in the other, strongmen ruled the streets in the absence of a strong state presence. Using an original data set of retrospective health histories for women in each neighborhood, I find that women subject to governance by the Islamic group enjoyed better outcomes related to reproductive health than a statistically matched set of women in the comparable neighborhood while being no more likely to marry early or drop out of school. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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233. Measuring urban sexual cultures.
- Author
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Ghaziani, Amin
- Subjects
- *
NEIGHBORHOODS , *NEIGHBORHOODS & society , *SEXUAL minorities , *PSYCHOLOGY , *SOCIAL conditions of LGBTQ+ people - Abstract
Gay neighborhoods across the United States are de-concentrating in today's so-called 'post-gay' era as sexual minorities assimilate into the mainstream and disperse across the city. This context creates a problem of measurement. If by 'culture' we mean to say a particular way of life of a group or subgroup of people like sexual minorities, and if that way of life is blending with other aspects of the metropolis, then how can we detect distinct urban sexual cultures? In this article, I use 125 interviews with Chicago residents to propose a two-pronged strategy. First, gay neighborhoods continue to house anchor institutions, despite ongoing residential out-migrations. These are the primary engines of community building, and they locate the material culture of a group in a specific place. Commemorations serve as a second indicator for a culture, and they too put meanings into form. Although it is a fact of city life that all neighborhoods change, anchors and commemorations are analytic devices that scholars can use to observe urban sexual cultures. More generally, they provide a framework for how to measure the shifting geographic profile of a historically stigmatized group as it experiences positive change in public opinion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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- View/download PDF
234. PERCEIVED FINANCIAL COSTS AND NEIGHBORHOOD EFFECT OF FORECLOSURES BY NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBORS IN USDA RURAL AREAS.
- Author
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Delgadillo, Lucy, Allen, Jamie, and Dehart, Paola
- Subjects
NEIGHBORHOODS & society ,FORECLOSURE ,RURAL geography ,RURAL population ,ECONOMICS ,TWENTY-first century ,SOCIAL history ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Many studies on foreclosures have collected information on individuals or families who experience foreclosure. Other studies have computed actual costs of foreclosure instead of the perception of foreclosure costs. Others have used aggregate data on foreclosed homes, as their unit of analysis. But no single study found has looked at the perceived financial cost and neighborhood effect of a foreclosed home in rural areas, neither have they used the next-door neighbors as the unit of analysis. This study fills this gap in knowledge by investigating how the next-door homeowners perceive financial and neighborhood changes because of their adjacent foreclosed home. The study used a financial and social scale as well as perceptions of foreclosures in general and about their neighbors' foreclosure in particular to answer the research questions. An additional uniqueness of this study is that it was conducted in USDA rural designated areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
235. 'We Are Here Alone': The Ironic Potentials and Vulnerabilities of Mixed (Up) Districts in Central Jakarta.
- Author
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Simone, Abdoumaliq
- Subjects
NEIGHBORHOODS ,NEIGHBORHOODS & society ,MIXED-income housing ,URBAN studies ,INDONESIAN economy ,SOCIAL history - Abstract
The durability of central city districts in large metropolitan systems of the majority world has largely been attained through intricate intersections of physical, infrastructural, human and discursive materials, as these intersections are continuously remade through shifting constellations of the incremental initiatives of residents. Residents have learned to use the city as a place to continuously explore new relationships among things and extract a wide range of unanticipated capacities from them. This is a collective resourcefulness from which there might be much to draw in terms of using the carbon-driven exigencies of infrastructural transformation as the occasion to reanimate more egalitarian political projects. Although many collective efforts are increasingly being disassembled, the reflections of a single resident of one of Jakarta's most heterogeneous residential districts points to how the revitalization of such efforts might be conceived. The efficacy of political efforts to address intensified vulnerability partly entails replenishing intense mixtures of built and physical environments as provocations and platforms for complex social maneuvers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
236. Neither 'Deepest, Darkest Peckham' nor 'Run-of-the-Mill' East Dulwich: The Middle Classes and their 'Others' in an Inner- London Neighbourhood.
- Author
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Jackson, Emma and Benson, Michaela
- Subjects
MIDDLE class ,NEIGHBORHOODS ,NEIGHBORHOODS & society ,MULTICULTURALISM ,URBAN sociology ,TWENTY-first century ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,SOCIAL conditions in England - Abstract
This article examines how middle-class residents of an inner-London neighbourhood draw up socio-spatial and symbolic boundaries between themselves and their 'others'. Through a discussion of accounts of two very different boundaries - the boundary of a multi-ethnic high street and a less clearly defined boundary of a neighbouring middle-class area - we argue that the production of middle-class identities is bound up with processes of disaffiliation not only from proximate stigmatized areas, but also from more upmarket areas and the people who populate them. Against this background it becomes clear that middle-class claims to belonging are made through (1) the asymmetric processes by which the middle classes create and maintain spatial boundaries between themselves and racialized/classed others, and (2) the subtle processes of distinction that go on within the middle classes. Nevertheless, relationships to place remain ambivalent, and as neighbourhoods undergo change, physical boundaries separating one area from another refuse to stay put. We argue that the re-inscription of such boundaries in the accounts of middle-class respondents are attempts to create a stable identity on the shifting ground of the contemporary global city. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
237. Loving Diversity/Controlling Diversity: Exploring the Ambivalent Mobilization of Upper-Middle-Class Gentrifiers, South End, Boston.
- Author
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Tissot, Sylvie
- Subjects
GENTRIFICATION ,NEIGHBORHOODS ,NEIGHBORHOODS & society ,MULTICULTURALISM ,SOCIAL classes ,TWENTY-first century ,PSYCHOLOGY ,SOCIAL history - Abstract
This article centers on a group of upper-middle-class gentrifiers living in a neighborhood in the South End of Boston, and their complex attitude towards diversity. I use data from my fieldwork in the South End, based on ethnographic observation and 77 interviews with residents active in local organizations, such as neighborhood associations. These residents explicitly stress their endorsement of diversity, in terms of class, race, but also sexual orientation, and their commitment to maintaining it. I examine the meaning they give to this principle, the actions they take in its name and the kind of relations they establish with those 'others' who embody such diversity. I argue that the gentrifiers' love of diversity, which cannot be reduced to sheer hypocrisy, is intrinsically linked to their capacity to control it, thus shedding light on the changing definition of social distinction in upper-middle-class culture. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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- View/download PDF
238. The four components and six essential pairs: A framework for neighbourhood revitalization.
- Author
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Morckel, Victoria
- Subjects
- *
COMMUNITY development , *URBAN growth , *STAKEHOLDERS , *NEIGHBORHOODS & society , *DECISION making , *ASSET management - Abstract
The article discusses the four components and six essential pairs for a framework that can be used for neigbourhood revitalization efforts and can help ensure that internal and external stakeholders are meeting both the physical and social needs of the neighbourhood. It mentions that the framework aims to promote stakeholder involvement beyond the decision-making process and spur economic development. Asset building is also discusses as another approach to neighbourhood revitalization.
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- 2014
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239. Redefining Neighborhoods Using Common Destinations: Social Characteristics of Activity Spaces and Home Census Tracts Compared.
- Author
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Jones, Malia and Pebley, Anne
- Subjects
- *
PUBLIC spaces & society , *NEIGHBORHOODS & society , *GEOGRAPHIC information systems , *SEGREGATION , *ADULTS , *SOCIAL history - Abstract
Research on neighborhood effects has focused largely on residential neighborhoods, but people are exposed to many other places in the course of their daily lives-at school, at work, when shopping, and so on. Thus, studies of residential neighborhoods consider only a subset of the social-spatial environment affecting individuals. In this article, we examine the characteristics of adults' 'activity spaces'-spaces defined by locations that individuals visit regularly-in Los Angeles County, California. Using geographic information system (GIS) methods, we define activity spaces in two ways and estimate their socioeconomic characteristics. Our research has two goals. First, we determine whether residential neighborhoods represent the social conditions to which adults are exposed in the course of their regular activities. Second, we evaluate whether particular groups are exposed to a broader or narrower range of social contexts in the course of their daily activities. We find that activity spaces are substantially more heterogeneous in terms of key social characteristics, compared to residential neighborhoods. However, the characteristics of both home neighborhoods and activity spaces are closely associated with individual characteristics. Our results suggest that most people experience substantial segregation across the range of spaces in their daily lives, not just at home. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
240. Integrating Space With Place in Health Research: A Multilevel Spatial Investigation Using Child Mortality in 1880 Newark, New Jersey.
- Author
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Xu, Hongwei, Logan, John, and Short, Susan
- Subjects
- *
NEIGHBORHOODS , *SPATIAL behavior , *EGOISM , *CHILD mortality , *NEIGHBORHOODS & society - Abstract
Research on neighborhoods and health increasingly acknowledges the need to conceptualize, measure, and model spatial features of social and physical environments. When ignoring underlying spatial dynamics, we run the risk of biased statistical inference and misleading results. In this article, we propose an integrated multilevel spatial approach for Poisson models of discrete responses. In an empirical example of child mortality in 1880 Newark, New Jersey, we compare this multilevel spatial approach with the more typical aspatial multilevel approach. Results indicate that spatially defined egocentric neighborhoods, or distance-based measures, outperform administrative areal units, such as census units. In addition, although results do not vary by specific definitions of egocentric neighborhoods, they are sensitive to geographic scale and modeling strategy. Overall, our findings confirm that adopting a spatial multilevel approach enhances our ability to disentangle the effect of space from that of place, pointing to the need for more careful spatial thinking in population research on neighborhoods and health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
241. BETWEEN PLACES AND FLOWS: TOWARDS A NEW AGENDA FOR NEIGHBOURHOOD RESEARCH IN AN AGE OF MOBILITY.
- Author
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van Kempen, Ronald and Wissink, Bart
- Subjects
- *
NEIGHBORHOODS , *NEIGHBORHOODS & society , *SOCIAL mobility , *SOCIAL problems , *SEGREGATION - Abstract
ABSTRACT This article discusses the role of the neighbourhood in an era of increased mobility. It explores the consequences of the 'new mobilities paradigm', which argues that the growing importance of flows - of people, goods and information - results in a deterritorialization of social practices. Rows thus gain prominence in comparison to places like regions and neighbourhoods. At the same time, however, neighbourhoods continue to play a role in the actions and imaginations of people, neighbourhood organizations, and government policies. People still live in neighbourhoods, and governments still try to solve often severe social problems through neighbourhood policies. We argue that the neighbourhood has to be re-imagined as a collection of hybrid nodes connecting a multiplicity of flows that bind actors and objects in order to understand the potential effectiveness of these policies. From this new mobilities perspective, we make suggestions for future neighbourhood research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
242. Does Growing Up in a High Crime Neighborhood Affect Youth Criminal Behavior?†.
- Subjects
NEIGHBORHOODS & society ,CRIME forecasting ,VIOLENT crimes ,CRIME ,REFUGEES ,YOUTH ,SOCIAL interaction - Abstract
This paper investigates the effect of early exposure to neighborhood crime on subsequent criminal behavior of youth exploiting a unique natural experiment between 1986 and 1998 when refugee immigrants to Denmark were assigned to neighborhoods quasi-randomly. We find strong evidence that the share of young people convicted for crimes, in particular violent crimes, in the neighborhood increases convictions of male assignees later in life. No such effects are found for other measures of neighborhood crime including the rate of committed crimes. Our findings suggest social interaction as a key channel through which neighborhood crime is linked to individual criminal behavior. (JEL J13, J15, K42, R23, Z13) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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- View/download PDF
243. Differences between Cohousing and Gated Communities. A Literature Review.
- Author
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Ruiu, Maria L.
- Subjects
- *
PRIVATE communities , *COOPERATIVE housing , *COMMUNITIES , *NEIGHBORHOODS & society , *SOCIALIZATION , *SAFETY - Abstract
On the basis of the literature (produced mainly by sociologists, architects, and geographers) about gated and cohousing communities, this work analyzes how these communities differ from each other. The analysis suggests that cohousing and gated communities are different in the nature of relationships between residents and in the reasons why they arise, even if there are some points of similarity. The risk of a degeneration of cohousing in the gated type is linked in particular with a complete transformation of the grass-roots model (typical of cohousing) to the top-down speculative scheme (typical of gated communities). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
244. Neighbourhoods and Municipalities as Contextual Opportunities for Interethnic Contact.
- Author
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Petermann, Sören
- Subjects
- *
ETHNIC relations , *NEIGHBORHOODS & society , *CITIES & towns , *NONCITIZENS , *ETHNIC neighborhoods , *EXPATRIATE communities ,RACE relations in Germany ,SOCIAL conditions in Germany - Abstract
This article investigates consequences of spatial contexts on interethnic contact. Despite the acknowledged integrative effects of pleasant interethnic relationships, several unresolved issues remain in this research field: investigations at two contextual levels simultaneously—i.e. neighbourhood and municipality levels; investigations of several contextual characteristics simultaneously, e.g. ethnic concentration, physical contact opportunities, population size; investigations on different kinds of interethnic contact, for example, contact with neighbours, with friends or in general. The present study contributes to these issues by analysing interethnic contact from a native’s perspective using a German nation-wide dataset. A considerably high proportion of Germans (72 per cent) have contact with foreigners in at least one out of four measured types. Ethnic concentration is the strongest contextual predictor for all kinds of interethnic contact. Physical contact opportunities in the immediate neighbourhood foster interethnic contact in the neighbourhood only, while municipality size mostly diminishes interethnic contact. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
245. Neighbourhood Diversity and Social Trust: An Empirical Analysis of Interethnic Contact and Group-specific Effects.
- Author
-
Gundelach, Birte and Freitag, Markus
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL aspects of trust , *CULTURAL pluralism , *NEIGHBORHOODS & society , *ETHNIC neighborhoods , *ADMINISTRATIVE & political divisions , *INTERGROUP relations , *ETHNIC relations , *SOCIAL history - Abstract
To date, neighbourhood studies on ethnic diversity and social trust have revealed inconclusive findings. In this paper, three innovations are proposed in order to systemise the knowledge about neighbourhood ethnic diversity and the development of social trust. First, it is proposed to use a valid trust measure that is sensitive to the local neighbourhood context. Second, the paper argues for a conception of organically evolved neighbourhoods, rather than using local administrative units as readily available proxies for neighbourhood divisions. Thirdly, referring to intergroup contact theory and group-specific effects of diversity, the paper challenges the notion that ethnic diversity has overwhelmingly negative effects on social trust. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
246. Orientalism at home: the case of 'Canada's toughest neighbourhood'.
- Author
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Richardson, Chris
- Subjects
NEIGHBORHOODS & society ,MASS media ,NATIONALISM ,CRIME ,GANGS ,SOCIAL history - Abstract
This article examines representations of Jane-Finch, a community in north-west Toronto deemed 'Canada's toughest neighbourhood' by The Globe and Mail in 2007. By exploring how the dominant news media negotiate a sense of Canadian identity in contradistinction to this marginalised space, the article highlights the insights that Edward Said's Orientalism (1978) creates when translated into a Canadian context. I argue that by applying Said's conceptual framework to Canadian communities such as Jane-Finch, scholars stand to learn much about the myth of what it means to be Canadian and how the mainstream news media reproduce this (self-) knowledge. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
247. Let Their Voices Be Seen: Exploring Mental Mapping as a Feminist Visual Methodology for the Study of Migrant Women.
- Author
-
Jung, Hyunjoo
- Subjects
MAPS -- Social aspects ,NEIGHBORHOODS & society ,IMMIGRANTS ,WOMEN immigrants ,FOREIGN spouses ,INTERNATIONAL marriage ,WOMEN'S studies ,EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
This article explores how mental mapping can be used as a critical methodology for feminist migration studies. In a case study of female marriage migrants who settle in rural areas in South Korea from other Asian countries, I attempt to develop mental mapping to supplement verbal interviews. Mental maps of hometowns and current neighborhoods drawn by my interviewees represent their geographical imaginations and complex identity negotiations that mirror the change in their social locations. In order to understand multilayered meanings embedded in the images and the way in which power relations existent between the researcher and the researched affect the map production, I suggest a critical reading of the maps. The article shows how a reflexive and intertextual reading makes a difference to the interpretation of the maps. It argues that the maps are not mere reflections of the women's cognition, but rather socially constructed texts through which their desires, emotions, feelings and internal contradictions are expressed and negotiated. My research suggests that mental mapping, if ethically performed and critically evaluated, has potential as a means to convey the unheard voices of the marginalized to diverse audiences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
248. Ecologies, Post-Modern Urbanisms, and Symbolic Economies: A Comparative Assessment of American Urban Sociology.
- Author
-
Hunter, Marcus Anthony
- Subjects
- *
URBAN sociology , *COMPARATIVE sociology , *SOCIAL theory , *CITIES & towns , *ETHNOLOGY , *NEIGHBORHOODS & society , *SOCIAL history - Abstract
The field of urban sociology has been significantly linked to particular cities, with cities such as Chicago (IL), Los Angeles (CA), and New York City (NY) have become hallmarks reflecting both the possibilities and the limitations of the urban sociological imagination. Using what have been three major foci in American urban sociology - 1) Organization of the City, 2) Ethnography and 3) Neighborhoods - using a comparative assessment of the field this paper seeks to apprehend the larger understandings, trends and methods in the field. Comparing urban sociological methods and theories through sections focusing on the three aforementioned themes, this article underscores paths taken in the field whilst highlighting potential new directions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
249. Neighbourhood Change, Mobility and Incumbent Processes: Exploring Income Developments of In-migrants, Out-migrants and Non-migrants of Neighbourhoods.
- Author
-
Teernstra, Annalies
- Subjects
- *
NEIGHBORHOODS & society , *SOCIAL mobility , *IMMIGRANTS , *INCOME , *NEIGHBORHOODS , *CITIES & towns , *CHANGE , *HOUSING market , *ECONOMICS , *SOCIAL history ,ECONOMIC conditions in the Netherlands, 1945- ,HISTORY of the Netherlands, 1945- - Abstract
Most studies on neighbourhood change attribute a key role to mobility in social upgrading and downgrading patterns, while incumbent processes—i.e. changes in the socioeconomic status of non-migrants—are often ignored. This paper explores the relationship between mobility and neighbourhood change by examining income developments of in-migrants, out-migrants and non-migrants of neighbourhoods in three Dutch cities. The paper demonstrates that in- and out-migration are not the only processes at work and that changes in the socioeconomic status of non-migrants are of importance too. Within upgrading neighbourhoods, incumbent processes of non-migrants seem to be an important driver of upgrading. Furthermore, although in-migrants have relatively low incomes when moving in, they experience strong income gains in the years after in-migrating. The contribution of out-migrants to upgrading is mixed. In line with previous studies, migration reinforces downgrading processes, although at the same time, incumbent processes of non-migrants impede downgrading. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
250. Neighbourhood Attachment in Ethnically Diverse Areas: The Role of Interethnic Ties.
- Author
-
Górny, Agata and Toruńczyk-Ruiz, Sabina
- Subjects
- *
ETHNIC relations , *NEIGHBORHOODS & society , *CULTURAL pluralism , *CITIES & towns , *DEMOGRAPHY , *SOCIAL history ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
This article examines the relationship between ethnic diversity in the neighbourhood and attachment to it, while addressing the role of interethnic relations—both within and beyond the neighbourhood—and differentiating between native and migrant residents. The analyses rely on data from an international research project conducted in 2009/10 among residents of ethnically diverse areas in six European cities: Bilbao, Lisbon, Rotterdam, Thessalonica, Vienna and Warsaw. The obtained results confirm earlier findings as regards the general negative association between ethnic diversity and neighbourhood attachment, but more importantly, reveal that having interethnic relations moderates this relationship differently for natives and migrants. Ethnic diversity does not erode neighbourhood attachment for natives who have ties with people of other ethnicities, or for migrants with mono-ethnic ties. This pattern is explained by the different meaning that a diverse setting has for natives and for migrants. Possible implications of these findings are also discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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