Incivilities, Place Attachment and Crime: Block and Individual Effects
The popular incivilities hypothesis suggests physical incivilities, such as unkempt lawns and litter, and weak social ties with neighbors encourage crime. Despite a strong impact on policing policies and public awareness, this hypothesis has seldom been tested. We extend this basic model to test whe...
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2004
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sg-smu-ink.lkcsb_research-34312016-02-12T06:21:21Z Incivilities, Place Attachment and Crime: Block and Individual Effects Brown, Barbara Perkins, Douglas BROWN, Graham The popular incivilities hypothesis suggests physical incivilities, such as unkempt lawns and litter, and weak social ties with neighbors encourage crime. Despite a strong impact on policing policies and public awareness, this hypothesis has seldom been tested. We extend this basic model to test whether place attachments protect from crime as well. In a suburban area facing decline, multilevel (hierarchical linear modeling) analyses reveal that renters, properties with more physical incivilities, and blocks with more physical incivilities experience more subsequent crimes. Although these actual physical incivilities were important predictors of crime, residents’ perceptions of incivilities were not, suggesting that environmental incivilities act directly upon offenders, not through non-offender resident perceptions. A cross-level interaction indicated incivilities predicted crime less well on socially cohesive blocks, suggesting that social cohesion can buffer the effects of the physical environment. Weaker block level place attachments also contributed independently to individuals’ risks of crime, demonstrating that place attachment merits greater attention in neighborhood revitalization and crime reduction interventions. 2004-09-01T07:00:00Z text https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/2432 info:doi/10.1016/j.jenvp.2004.01.001 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvp.2004.01.001 Research Collection Lee Kong Chian School Of Business eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University The popular incivilities hypothesis suggests physical incivilities such as unkempt lawns and litter and weak social ties with neighbors encourage crime. Despite a strong impact on policing policies and public awareness this hypothesis has seldom been tested. We extend this basic model to test whether place attachments protect from crime as well. In a suburban area facing decline multilevel (hierarchical linear modeling) analyses reveal that renters properties with more physical incivilities and blocks with more physical incivilities experience more subsequent crimes. Although these actual physical incivilities were important predictors of crime residents’ perceptions of incivilities were not suggesting that environmental incivilities act directly upon offenders not through non-offender resident perceptions. A cross-level interaction indicated incivilities predicted crime less well on socially cohesive blocks suggesting that social cohesion can buffer the effects of the physical environment. Weaker block level place attachments also contributed independently to individuals’ risks of crime demonstrating that place attachment merits greater attention in neighborhood revitalization and crime reduction interventions Business |
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The popular incivilities hypothesis suggests physical incivilities such as unkempt lawns and litter and weak social ties with neighbors encourage crime. Despite a strong impact on policing policies and public awareness this hypothesis has seldom been tested. We extend this basic model to test whether place attachments protect from crime as well. In a suburban area facing decline multilevel (hierarchical linear modeling) analyses reveal that renters properties with more physical incivilities and blocks with more physical incivilities experience more subsequent crimes. Although these actual physical incivilities were important predictors of crime residents’ perceptions of incivilities were not suggesting that environmental incivilities act directly upon offenders not through non-offender resident perceptions. A cross-level interaction indicated incivilities predicted crime less well on socially cohesive blocks suggesting that social cohesion can buffer the effects of the physical environment. Weaker block level place attachments also contributed independently to individuals’ risks of crime demonstrating that place attachment merits greater attention in neighborhood revitalization and crime reduction interventions Business |
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The popular incivilities hypothesis suggests physical incivilities such as unkempt lawns and litter and weak social ties with neighbors encourage crime. Despite a strong impact on policing policies and public awareness this hypothesis has seldom been tested. We extend this basic model to test whether place attachments protect from crime as well. In a suburban area facing decline multilevel (hierarchical linear modeling) analyses reveal that renters properties with more physical incivilities and blocks with more physical incivilities experience more subsequent crimes. Although these actual physical incivilities were important predictors of crime residents’ perceptions of incivilities were not suggesting that environmental incivilities act directly upon offenders not through non-offender resident perceptions. A cross-level interaction indicated incivilities predicted crime less well on socially cohesive blocks suggesting that social cohesion can buffer the effects of the physical environment. Weaker block level place attachments also contributed independently to individuals’ risks of crime demonstrating that place attachment merits greater attention in neighborhood revitalization and crime reduction interventions Business Brown, Barbara Perkins, Douglas BROWN, Graham Incivilities, Place Attachment and Crime: Block and Individual Effects |
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The popular incivilities hypothesis suggests physical incivilities, such as unkempt lawns and litter, and weak social ties with neighbors encourage crime. Despite a strong impact on policing policies and public awareness, this hypothesis has seldom been tested. We extend this basic model to test whether place attachments protect from crime as well. In a suburban area facing decline, multilevel (hierarchical linear modeling) analyses reveal that renters, properties with more physical incivilities, and blocks with more physical incivilities experience more subsequent crimes. Although these actual physical incivilities were important predictors of crime, residents’ perceptions of incivilities were not, suggesting that environmental incivilities act directly upon offenders, not through non-offender resident perceptions. A cross-level interaction indicated incivilities predicted crime less well on socially cohesive blocks, suggesting that social cohesion can buffer the effects of the physical environment. Weaker block level place attachments also contributed independently to individuals’ risks of crime, demonstrating that place attachment merits greater attention in neighborhood revitalization and crime reduction interventions. |
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text |
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Brown, Barbara Perkins, Douglas BROWN, Graham |
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Brown, Barbara Perkins, Douglas BROWN, Graham |
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Brown, Barbara |
title |
Incivilities, Place Attachment and Crime: Block and Individual Effects |
title_short |
Incivilities, Place Attachment and Crime: Block and Individual Effects |
title_full |
Incivilities, Place Attachment and Crime: Block and Individual Effects |
title_fullStr |
Incivilities, Place Attachment and Crime: Block and Individual Effects |
title_full_unstemmed |
Incivilities, Place Attachment and Crime: Block and Individual Effects |
title_sort |
incivilities, place attachment and crime: block and individual effects |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
publishDate |
2004 |
url |
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/2432 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvp.2004.01.001 |
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