Social Capital and Crime in New York City's Low-Income Housing
Published 2002
Author Susan Saegert, Gary Winkel, Charles Swartz
Source Fannie Mae Foundation
URL Click here to download the full document
PDF: 38 pages, 359 kbytes

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This article presents evidence that components of social capital can play a prospective role in preventing crime in low-income housing. It develops a conceptual approach to crime prevention involving social capital, alternative forms of ownership, and environmental design considerations. The study compares five programs that house New York City's poorest, mostly minority residents. The effectiveness of social capital in preventing crime is assessed using data from surveys of 487 buildings in Brooklyn, NY, and crime data from the New York City Police Department.

This document is in the public domain and may be freely copied, distributed or publicly displayed.

 


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