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Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency
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The Built Environment and Community Crime Risk Interpretation

Pamela Wilcox

Department of Sociology, University of Kentucky, 1531 Patterson Office Tower, Lexington, KY 40506-0027; pwroun1{at}uky.edu.

Neil Quisenberry

McKendree College.

Shayne Jones

Law and Psychiatry Research Program, Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic.

In this article, the authors examine whether subjective perceptions of community safety are informed by the built environment. They posit that the built environment serves as a heuristic device, providing cues about likely levels of neighborhood crime, independent of the effects of neighborhood crime itself. Using data on 4,456individuals nested within 100 census tracts, the authors estimate hierarchical logistic models of perceived community crime risk. They focus on the role of the neighborhood built environment in the form of aggregated perceptions of nonresidential land use, while controlling for individual-level criminal opportunity, community-level social structural antecedents, and community-level objective crime. The findings indicate that the neighborhood-level presence of businesses and parks and playgrounds increases individual perceptions of community danger, but these effects disappear once neighborhood crime rates are controlled. The presence of schools has no effect on subjective interpretations of community crime, regardless of whether actual area crime is considered.

Key Words: community • risk • fear

Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency, Vol. 40, No. 3, 322-345 (2003)
DOI: 10.1177/0022427803253801


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Criminal Justice and BehaviorHome page
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[Abstract] [PDF]