SEGREGATION AND CRIME - THE EFFECT OF BLACK SOCIAL-ISOLATION ON THE RATES OF BLACK URBAN VIOLENCE

Citation
Es. Shihadeh et N. Flynn, SEGREGATION AND CRIME - THE EFFECT OF BLACK SOCIAL-ISOLATION ON THE RATES OF BLACK URBAN VIOLENCE, Social forces, 74(4), 1996, pp. 1325-1352
Citations number
86
Categorie Soggetti
Sociology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00377732
Volume
74
Issue
4
Year of publication
1996
Pages
1325 - 1352
Database
ISI
SICI code
0037-7732(1996)74:4<1325:SAC-TE>2.0.ZU;2-1
Abstract
Prior segregation-crime research has failed to recognize that segregat ion has many geographic forms and each may have a distinct macrosocial path to crime. We sharpen the conceptual link between segregation and crime by considering how the social isolation of urban blacks increas es black violence. Using race-disaggregated Uniform Crime Report (UCR) and census data for 1990, we examine the link between black social is olation and the rates of black homicide and robbery in U.S. cities. In contrast to previous research, which employs the index of dissimilari ty (D) as a default indicator of segregation (which it is not), we mea sure the spatial isolation (P) of blacks from whites. Black isolation emerges as a strong predictor of the rates of black violence in major U.S. cities, a finding that may account for prior evidence of a link b etween segregation and violence at the macro level.