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Social Disorganization and Neighborhood Fear: Examining the Intersection of Individual,Community, and County Characteristics
Authors:Jeremy R Porter  Nicole E Rader  Jeralynn S Cossman
Institution:(1) Graduate Center, Brooklyn College and Institute for Demographic Research, City University of New York, New York, USA;(2) Department of Sociology, Mississippi State University, Mississippi State, PO Box C, Starkville, 39762, MS, USA;(3) Department of Sociology and Social Science Research Center, Mississippi State University, Starkville, MS, USA;(4) 218 Whitehead Hall, CUNY-Brooklyn College, 2900 Bedford Ave., New York, NY 11210, USA
Abstract:Fear has long been studied as a consequence of crime given the consistent and ubiquitous nature of fear as a reaction and the systematic variations in its consequences. Past research has shown significant variations in fear of crime at both the individual and ecological level. Here we implement a multi-level approach to understanding potential interactions between perceived safety in one’s neighborhood in relation to social disorganization indicators at the neighborhood level and crime rates at the county level. The nationally representative sample data (n = 2,610) used in this analysis combines individual level data collected in 2006 from the Panel Study of Religion and Ethnicity (PS-ARE) with ecological level data at the tract and county level from the 2000 US Census. The findings suggest a three level interaction negating the well known protection hypothesis of marriage and crime; this essentially means that as being married or cohabitating decreases the negative effects of being in a community with a high level of familial disruption (percent of divorced) increases, but that effect is substantively negatively tempered as the violent crime rate of the county rises.
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