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Population Size, Change, and Crime in U.S. Cities
Authors:Thomas Rotolo  Charles R. Tittle
Affiliation:(1) Department of Sociology, Washington State University, Wilson Hall, Pullman, WA 00164-4020, USA;(2) Department of Sociology and Anthropology, North Carolina State University Campus, Campus Box 8107, Raleigh, NC 27695-8107, USA
Abstract:The sometimes noted contradiction between cross-sectional and longitudinal relationships concerning city population size and crime rates is reexamined using more complex analytic procedures, controlling for extraneous variables, and allowing for non-monotonic relationships. Instead of a simple cross-sectional relationship between population size and crime rates, the more sophisticated analysis reveals either no association or a quadratic relationship. Similarly, instead of a simple lack of longitudinal relationship or a negative one, the more complicated analysis shows a non-monotonic pattern for three of six offenses. However, we contend that these divergent patterns for cross-sectional relative to longitudinal data are not necessarily indicative of an “anomaly.” Instead, they represent different aspects of a dynamic process in need of more extensive theorizing. Finally, the cross-sectional results showing that city size and crime rates are either not linked or when linked are in a non-monotonic pattern call into question one of the accepted relationships in criminology that have long guided thinking about crime.
Contact InformationCharles R. TittleEmail: Phone: +1-919-858-0374
Keywords:City  Population  Size  Crime  Change  Crime rate
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