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1.
RSF ; 3(2): 210-231, 2017 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29034322

ABSTRACT

Residential segregation by income and education is increasing alongside slowly declining black-white segregation. Segregation in urban neighborhood residents' non-home activity spaces has not been explored. How integrated are the daily routines of people who live in the same neighborhood? Are people with different socioeconomic backgrounds that live near one another less likely to share routine activity locations than those of similar education or income? Do these patterns vary across the socioeconomic continuum or by neighborhood structure? The analyses draw on unique data from the Los Angeles Family and Neighborhood Survey that identify the location where residents engage in routine activities. Using multilevel p2 (network) models, we analyze pairs of households located in the same neighborhood and examine whether the dyad combinations across three levels of SES conduct routine activities in the same location, and whether neighbor socioeconomic similarity in the co-location of routine activities is dependent on the level of neighborhood socioeconomic inequality and trust. Results indicate that, on average, increasing SES diminishes the likelihood of sharing activity locations with any SES group. This pattern is most pronounced in neighborhoods characterized by high levels of socioeconomic inequality. Neighborhood trust explains a nontrivial proportion of the inequality effect on the extent of routine activity sorting by SES. Thus stark, visible neighborhood-level inequality by SES may lead to enhanced effects of distrust on the willingness to share routines across class.

2.
J Youth Adolesc ; 45(1): 17-34, 2016 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26215378

ABSTRACT

Neighborhoods are salient contexts for youth that shape adolescent development partly through informal social controls on their behavior. This research examines how immigrant concentration within and beyond the residential neighborhood influences adolescent alcohol use. Residential neighborhood immigrant concentration may lead to a cohesive, enclave-like community that protects against adolescent alcohol use. But heterogeneity in the immigrant concentrations characterizing the places residents visit as they engage in routine activities outside of the neighborhood where they live may weaken the social control benefits of the social ties and shared cultural orientations present in enclave communities. This study investigates whether the protective influence of residential neighborhood immigrant concentration on adolescent alcohol consumption diminishes when youth live in communities where residents collectively are exposed to areas with more diverse immigrant concentrations. This study tests this contention by analyzing survey and geographic routine activity space data from the Los Angeles Family and Neighborhood Survey, and the 2000 census. The sample includes 793 adolescents (48.7% female, 16.5% foreign-born Latino, 42.5% US-born Latino, 11.0% black, 30% white/other) between the ages of 12 and 17 who live in 65 neighborhoods in Los Angeles County. Immigrant concentration among these neighborhoods derives primarily from Latin America. The results from multilevel models show that immigrant concentration protects against adolescent alcohol use only when there is low neighborhood-level diversity of exposures to immigrant concentration among the contexts residents visit outside of their residential neighborhood. This research highlights the importance of considering the effects of aggregate exposures to non-home contexts on adolescent wellbeing.


Subject(s)
Emigrants and Immigrants/psychology , Hispanic or Latino/psychology , Residence Characteristics/statistics & numerical data , Underage Drinking/ethnology , Adolescent , Child , Female , Humans , Los Angeles , Male , Social Environment , Social Theory
3.
Soc Sci Res ; 54: 303-18, 2015 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26463550

ABSTRACT

In this paper, we extend recent research on the spatial measurement of segregation and the spatial dynamics of urban crime by conceptualizing, measuring, and describing local segregation by race-ethnicity and economic status, and examining the linkages of these conditions with levels of neighborhood violent and property crime. The analyses are based on all 8895 census tracts within a sample of 86 large U.S. cities. We fit multilevel models of crime that incorporate measures of local segregation. The results reveal that, net of city-level and neighborhood characteristics, White-Black local segregation is associated with lower violent and property crime. In contrast, local segregation of low income from high income households is connected with higher crime, particularly neighborhood violence.


Subject(s)
Black or African American , Crime , Income , Residence Characteristics , Social Class , Social Segregation , White People , Aggression , Cities , Female , Humans , Male , Models, Biological , Poverty , Social Conditions , Theft , United States , Urban Population , Violence
4.
AJS ; 114(6): 1765-802, 2009 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19852253

ABSTRACT

Drawing on structural racism and urban disadvantage approaches, this article posits a broad influence of citywide racial residential segregation on levels of violent crime across all urban neighborhoods regardless of their racial/ethnic composition. Multilevel models based on data from the National Neighborhood Crime Study for 7,622 neighborhoods in 79 cities throughout the United States reveal that segregation is positively associated with violent crime for white and various types of nonwhite neighborhoods. Nonetheless, there is a lack of parity in violence across these types of communities reflecting the larger racialized social system in which whites are able to use their privileged position to reside in the most advantaged neighborhoods, while African-Americans and Latinos live in the most disadvantaged urban communities and therefore bear the brunt of urban criminal violence.


Subject(s)
Prejudice , Racial Groups , Residence Characteristics , Social Justice/statistics & numerical data , Violence/statistics & numerical data , Adolescent , Adult , Black or African American , Aged , Child , Child, Preschool , Crime/statistics & numerical data , Female , Hispanic or Latino , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Middle Aged , Models, Theoretical , Multivariate Analysis , Poisson Distribution , Poverty , Risk Factors , Socioeconomic Factors , United States , Young Adult
5.
Demography ; 41(3): 585-605, 2004 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15461016

ABSTRACT

In our study, we took a first step toward broadening our understanding of the sources of both housing and wealth inequality by studying differences in housing equity among blacks, Hispanics, Asians, and non-Hispanic whites in the United States. Using data from the American Housing Survey, we found substantial and significant gaps in housing equity for blacks and Hispanics (but not for Asians) compared with whites, even after we controlled for a wide range of locational, life-cycle, socioeconomic, family, immigrant, and mortgage characteristics. Furthermore, the payoffs to many factors are notably weaker for minority than for white households. This finding is especially consistent across groups for the effects of age, socioeconomic status, and housing-market value. Blacks and Hispanics also uniformly receive less benefit from mortgage and housing characteristics than do whites. These findings lend credence to the burgeoning stratification perspective on wealth and housing inequality that acknowledges the importance of broader social and institutional processes of racial-ethnic stratification that advantage some groups, whites in this case, over others.


Subject(s)
Ethnicity/statistics & numerical data , Housing/economics , Ownership/economics , Socioeconomic Factors , Adult , Black or African American/statistics & numerical data , Age Distribution , Aged , Asian/statistics & numerical data , Ethnicity/classification , Family Characteristics , Financing, Personal/statistics & numerical data , Hispanic or Latino/statistics & numerical data , Housing/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Income/statistics & numerical data , Longitudinal Studies , Middle Aged , Ownership/statistics & numerical data , United States , White People/statistics & numerical data
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