Original paper
The Long Arm of Poverty: Extended and Relational Geographies of Child Victimization and Neighborhood Violence Exposures
Abstract
Current models of neighborhood effects on victimization predominantly assume that residential neighborhoods function independent of their surroundings. Yet, a surprising proportion of violence occurs outside of victims’ residential neighborhoods. The current study extends on recent advances in spatial dynamics and neighborhood effects to explore the importance of different geographic scales and relational exposures to poverty for child violent...
Paper Details
Title
The Long Arm of Poverty: Extended and Relational Geographies of Child Victimization and Neighborhood Violence Exposures
Published Date
Jan 25, 2017
Journal
Volume
34
Issue
6
Pages
1096 - 1125
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Notes
History