University of Pittsburgh, School of Social Work, 2117 Cathedral of Learning, 4200 Fifth Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA 15260, United States.
Soc Sci Res. 2012 Jul;41(4):788-801. doi: 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2012.01.005. Epub 2012 Jan 30.
The Moving to Opportunity (MTO) program offered public housing residents in distressed communities a chance to move to low-poverty neighborhoods. The present study examined whether the resulting decline in neighborhood poverty led to lower levels of exposure to danger among children and youth ages 8-19years old (n=4606), and specifically, if there was a gender difference that matched the pattern of more beneficial program effects for girls and more adverse affects for boys. The study goes beyond previous research by using fixed effects to control for family factors that may influence moving behavior and confound estimates of gender differences in program impacts. Results showed that children experienced a decline in exposure to danger, with one key gender difference. Models based on brother-sister comparisons indicated that MTO had a more beneficial impact on exposure to drug activity for females than males. The findings suggest that neighborhood poverty is tied to children's exposure to danger. Moreover, exposure to drug activity may help explain the gender differences in impacts on children's mental health and risky behavior.
“流动到机会”(MTO)计划为处境艰难社区的公共住房居民提供了搬到贫困程度较低社区的机会。本研究考察了邻里贫困程度的下降是否导致 8-19 岁儿童和青少年(n=4606)接触危险的水平降低,特别是是否存在性别差异,这种性别差异与女孩受益更多、男孩受负面影响更大的模式相匹配。该研究通过使用固定效应来控制可能影响搬迁行为并混淆计划对性别差异影响的估计的家庭因素,从而超越了以往的研究。研究结果表明,儿童接触危险的程度有所下降,而且存在一个关键的性别差异。基于兄弟姐妹比较的模型表明,MTO 对女性接触毒品活动的影响比对男性更为有利。这些发现表明,邻里贫困与儿童接触危险有关。此外,接触毒品活动可能有助于解释对儿童心理健康和危险行为的影响方面存在的性别差异。