U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government, Department of Justice.

NCJRS Virtual Library

The Virtual Library houses over 235,000 criminal justice resources, including all known OJP works.
Click here to search the NCJRS Virtual Library

POVERTY, URBANIZATION, AND CRIME

NCJ Number
39471
Journal
Criminology Volume: 14 Issue: 3 Dated: (NOVEMBER 1976) Pages: 331-346
Author(s)
V E FLANGO; E L SHERBENOU
Date Published
1976
Length
16 pages
Annotation
RESULTS OF A STUDY WHICH EXAMINED THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN CRIME RATES AND SIX SOCIAL CHARACTERISTICS: AFFLUENCE, STAGE OF LIFE CYCLE, ECONOMIC SPECIALIZATION, EXPENDITURES POLICY, POVERTY, AND URBANIZATION.
Abstract
PRINCIPAL COMPONENTS ANALYSIS WAS USED TO REDUCE 59 DEMOGRAPHIC AND SOCIOECONOMIC CHARACTERISTICS OF 840 AMERICAN CITIES ITO THESE SIX FACTORS. WHEN REGRESSED UPON CRIME RATES TWO OF THESE SIX FACTORS, URBANIZATION AND POVERTY, WERE FOUND TO BE THE MORE IMPORTANT CRIMINOGENIC FORCES. THE EXCEPTION TO THIS GENERALIZATION WAS THE SOUTH, WHERE STAGES IN LIFE CYCLE WAS MORE IMPORTANT THAN POVERTY IN EXPLAINING CRIME. ONE REASON FOR THIS EXCEPTION MAY BE THAT THE SOUTH, THOUGH HAVING A LOWER STANDARD OF LIVING THAN OTHER REGIONS OF THE COUNTRY, DOES NOT HAVE THE 'CULTURE OF POVERTY' USUALLY ASSOCIATED WITH LOWER INCOME. CONTRARY TO THE ASSUMPTION UPON WHICH MOST ECOLOGY OF CRIME STUDIES ARE BASED, LARGER CITES (OVER 100,000 IN POPULATION) ARE NOT REPRESENTATIVE OF ALL CITIES. GREATER ASSOCIATION BETWEEN SOCIOECONOMIC VARIABLES AND CRIME WAS FOUND IN LARGER THAN IN SMALLER CITIES. (AUTHOR ABSTRACT MODIFIED)---DMC

Downloads

No download available

Availability