Feldmeyer Ben, Harris Casey T, Scroggins Jennifer
School of Criminal Justice, University of Cincinnati, CRC Room 5323A, P.O. Box 210389, Cincinnati, OH 45221, United States.
Department of Sociology and Criminal Justice, University of Arkansas, 211 Old Main, Fayetteville, AR 72701, United States.
Soc Sci Res. 2015 Jul;52:1-17. doi: 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2015.01.003. Epub 2015 Jan 16.
A growing body of research indicates that immigration to the U.S. has crime-reducing effects on aggregate levels of violence, which researchers have often attributed to the protective and revitalizing effects of immigrants settling in spatially concentrated neighborhoods. However, recent scholarship suggests that growing shares of the foreign-born population are bypassing these segregated immigrant enclaves and are dispersing more widely to other urban neighborhoods. Moreover, some scholars suggest that spatially isolating immigrant populations may not always be protective, but could actually contribute to social problems like crime, particularly in disadvantaged contexts. The current study offers one of the first analyses exploring the way that segregation of immigrant populations (relative to the U.S.-born) is related to year 2000 violent crime rates for nearly 500 census places in California and New York. Results of our analysis reveal no direct link between immigrant segregation and macro-level violence, but instead show that these effects are highly contextualized and depend on the resources present in locales. Specifically, immigrant segregation contributes to violence in highly disadvantaged places but is linked to lower violence in areas with greater resources.
越来越多的研究表明,移民到美国对总体暴力水平有减少犯罪的作用,研究人员通常将此归因于移民定居在空间集中的社区所产生的保护和振兴作用。然而,最近的学术研究表明,外国出生人口中越来越大的比例正在绕过这些隔离的移民飞地,更广泛地分散到其他城市社区。此外,一些学者认为,在空间上隔离移民人口不一定总是具有保护作用,反而可能实际上导致犯罪等社会问题,特别是在弱势环境中。当前的研究首次对移民人口(相对于美国出生人口)的隔离与加利福尼亚州和纽约州近500个人口普查区2000年暴力犯罪率之间的关系进行了分析。我们的分析结果显示,移民隔离与宏观层面的暴力之间没有直接联系,而是表明这些影响高度依赖具体情境,并且取决于当地现有的资源。具体而言,移民隔离在极度弱势的地方会导致暴力,但在资源较多的地区则与较低的暴力率相关。