Metropolitan Expansion and Black Social Dislocation: The Link between Suburbanization and Center-City Crime

A long-standing though unexplained finding is that the degree of suburbanization in a metropolitan area is positively related to the rates of serious crime in the incorporated center city. The authors account for this relationship by integrating theoretically two underlying features of urban life in the U.S. First, from a human ecology standpoint, suburbanization is part of a a broader metropolitan expansion process that undermined and isolated many center-city black communities. Second, serious crime in cities is disproportionately concentrated in black communities. They reexamine the suburbanization/city-crime link using racially disaggregated models fir cities and SMSAs in 1980. The findings show that the rate of suburbanization among the total SMSA population is strongly related to the center-city rates of serious crime among blacks, but not among whites. This supports the view that suburbanization increased black center-city crime rates by socially isolating black communities and engendering a variety of social problems. Indeed, upon controlling for potential mediators of the suburbanization-crime link, the relationship between suburbanization and black city-crime rates virtually disappeared

[1]  Edward J. Spar State and Metropolitan Area Data Book, 1986. , 1988 .

[2]  Jonathan S. Leonard The Interaction of Residential Segregation and Employment Discrimination , 1984 .

[3]  Woodrow W. Nichols,et al.  Urban Structure and Criminal Mobility , 1976 .

[4]  Lin Huff-Corzine,et al.  Southern Exposure: Deciphering the South's Influence on Homicide Rates , 1986 .

[5]  F. Abdellah Health, United States, 1989 , 1990 .

[6]  C. Murray,et al.  Losing Ground: American Social Policy, 1950-1980 , 1984 .

[7]  James E. Rosenbaum,et al.  Employment and earnings of low-income blacks who move to middle-class suburbs , 1991 .

[8]  Judith R. Blau,et al.  The Cost of Inequality: Metropolitan Structure and Violent Crime , 1982 .

[9]  G. Galster Residential segregation and interracial economic disparities: A simultaneous-equations approach , 1987 .

[10]  Darrell J. Steffensmeier,et al.  Economic Inequality, Family Disruption, and Urban Black Violence: Cities as Units of Stratification and Social Control , 1994 .

[11]  I. Garfinkel,et al.  Single Mothers, the Underclass, and Social Policy , 1989 .

[12]  R. Chilton ANALYZING URBAN CRIME DATA: Deterrence and the Limitations of Arrests per Offense Ratios , 1982 .

[13]  M. O. Chandler Public housing desegregation: What are the options? , 1992 .

[14]  Edward S. Shihadeh,et al.  Segregation and Crime: The Effect of Black Social Isolation on the Rates of Black Urban Violence , 1996 .

[15]  Wesley G. Skogan,et al.  The Changing Distribution of Big-City Crime , 1977 .

[16]  Robert J. Sampson,et al.  Structural Density and Criminal Victimization , 1983 .

[17]  W. Wilson The truly disadvantaged : the inner city, the underclass, and public policy , 1988 .

[18]  S L Boggs,et al.  Urban crime patterns. , 1965, American sociological review.

[19]  P. Cutright Income and Family Events: Marital Stability. , 1971 .

[20]  Michael J. Hindelang,et al.  Race and Involvement in Common Law Personal Crimes. , 1978 .

[21]  L. Friedman Government and Slum Housing: Some General Considerations , 1967 .

[22]  R. Herrnstein,et al.  The bell curve : intelligence and class structure in American life , 1995 .

[23]  P. Lejins Uniform Crime Reports , 1966 .

[24]  J. Farley,et al.  The Ecological Context of Urban Crime , 1981 .

[25]  Charles E. Bidwell,et al.  The Organization and Its Ecosystem: A Theory of Structuring in Organizations , 1985 .

[26]  J. F. Long Population deconcentration in the United States , 1981 .

[27]  R. Gastil Homicide and a Regional Culture of Violence , 1971 .

[28]  S. Danziger,et al.  Poverty and Family Structure: The Widening Gap between Evidence and Public Policy Issues , 1986 .

[29]  S. Messner Regional and Racial Effects on the Urban Homicide Rate: The Subculture of Violence Revisited , 1983, American Journal of Sociology.

[30]  G. Cain,et al.  The Black-White Difference in Youth Employment: Evidence for Demand-Side Factors , 1990, Journal of Labor Economics.

[31]  D. Massey American Apartheid: Segregation and the Making of the Underclass , 1993 .

[32]  Mitchell B. Chamlin,et al.  Social Structure and Crime Control Among Macrosocial Units , 1984, American Journal of Sociology.

[33]  John E. Farley,et al.  Suburbanization and Central-City Crime Rates: New Evidence and a Reinterpretation , 1987, American Journal of Sociology.

[34]  Anthony H. Pascal,et al.  The Economic Transformation of American Cities , 1984 .

[35]  Lawrence E. Cohen,et al.  Structural Covariates of Homicide Rates: Are There Any Invariances Across Time and Social Space? , 1990, American Journal of Sociology.

[36]  N. Astone,et al.  Welfare Realities: From Rhetoric to Reform , 1994 .

[37]  Albert D Hunter,et al.  Private, Parochial and Public Social Orders: The Problem of Crime and Incivility in Urban Communities , 1985 .

[38]  J. Gibbs,et al.  Crime Rates of American Cities in an Ecological Context , 1976, American Journal of Sociology.

[39]  N. Astone,et al.  Employment and Marriage among Inner-city Fathers , 1989 .

[40]  H. Holzer Black Youth Nonemployment: Duration and Job Search , 1984 .

[41]  L. Rainwater,et al.  Behind Ghetto Walls: Black Family Life in a Federal Slum , 1970 .

[42]  J. Kasarda,et al.  Contemporary Urban Ecology , 1977 .

[43]  John D. Kasarda,et al.  Urban Industrial Transition and the Underclass , 1989 .

[44]  A. Hawley,et al.  Urban Society: An Ecological Approach. , 1974 .

[45]  H. Finestone Victims of Change : Juvenile Delinquents in American Society , 1976 .

[46]  L. Curtis,et al.  Violence, race, and culture , 1975 .

[47]  Darrell J. Steffensmeier,et al.  The Differing Effects of Economic Inequality on Black and White Rates of Violence , 1992 .