Silverman Carol J, Segal Steven P
The first author serves as program director, Center for Self-Help Research, Berkeley California. The second author serves as Director, Social Welfare Research Group, School of Social Welfare, University of California at Berkeley and as an Editorial Board Member, Adult Residential Care Journal.
Adult Resid Care J. 1996 Fall;10(2):137-148.
Neighborhood resistance to unwanted land uses is a much heralded but insufficiently investigated feature of recent decades. This paper investigates local opposition to sheltered care for a people with mental disabilities. Using data gathered in a 12 year follow-up of a probability sample of sheltered care facilities in California, the study looks at changes over time in local opposition and at correlates of local reaction. It concludes that opposition is not related to typically proposed factors such as social class, inner-city location, or neighborhood cohesion but instead to the amount of disability of the residents, the ties of the operator to the neighborhood and location in an outer suburb.