Weisburd David, White Clair, Wooditch Alese
Department of Criminology, Law and Society, Center for Evidence Based Crime Policy, George Mason University, Fairfax, VA, USA.
Department of Criminal Justice and Sociology,Laramie, WY, USA.
Br J Criminol. 2020 Jun;60(4):873-891. doi: 10.1093/bjc/azaa007. Epub 2020 Mar 4.
Many scholars argue that collective efficacy is not relevant to understanding crime at the microgeographic level. We examine variation in collective efficacy across streets with different levels of crime in Baltimore City, MD, and, then, employ multilevel modelling to assess this relationship. We find that people who live in crime hot spots have much lower levels of collective efficacy than people who live in non-hot spot streets and that this relationship persists when controlling for a large number of potential confounders both at the street and community levels. These findings suggest the importance of collective efficacy both in understanding and controlling crime at microgeographic units.
许多学者认为,集体效能与在微观地理层面理解犯罪无关。我们研究了马里兰州巴尔的摩市不同犯罪水平街道上集体效能的差异,然后采用多层次建模来评估这种关系。我们发现,生活在犯罪热点地区的人的集体效能水平远低于生活在非热点街道的人,并且在控制了街道和社区层面的大量潜在混杂因素后,这种关系依然存在。这些发现表明集体效能在理解和控制微观地理单元的犯罪方面都很重要。