Violence Within Food Deserts: A Block-Group Examination of Food Access, Racial Composition, and Violent Crime.

IF 1.1 4区 医学 Q3 CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY
Hunter M Boehme, Robert J Kaminski, Timothy Mulrooney, Robert A Brown, Rakesh Malhotra
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

While there is substantial public health literature that documents the negative impacts of living in "food deserts" (e.g., obesity and diabetes), little is known regarding whether living in a food desert is associated with increased criminal victimization. With the block group as the unit of analysis, the present study examines whether there is a relationship between food deserts and elevated crime counts, and whether this relationship varies by racial composition. Results from multiple count models suggest that living in a food desert is not associated with higher levels of violent or property crime. But multiplicative models interacting percent Black with food deserts revealed statistically significant associations with violent crime but not property crime. Alternatively, multiplicative models interacting percent White with food deserts revealed statistically significant associational reductions in violent crimes. Several policy and research implications are discussed.

食物荒漠中的暴力:对食物获取、种族构成和暴力犯罪的分组研究》(A Block-Group Examination of Food Access, Racial Composition, and Violent Crime.
虽然有大量公共卫生文献记录了生活在 "食物沙漠 "中的负面影响(如肥胖症和糖尿病),但对于生活在食物沙漠中是否与犯罪率上升有关却知之甚少。本研究以街区为分析单位,探讨了食物荒漠与犯罪率上升之间是否存在关系,以及这种关系是否因种族构成而异。多重计数模型的结果表明,生活在食物沙漠中与较高的暴力或财产犯罪率无关。但是,黑人百分比与食物荒漠交互作用的乘法模型显示,食物荒漠与暴力犯罪有显著的统计学关联,但与财产犯罪无关。另外,白人百分比与食物沙漠交互作用的乘法模型显示,在统计学上,暴力犯罪的相关性显著降低。本文讨论了若干政策和研究意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Violence and Victims
Violence and Victims CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY-
CiteScore
1.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
61
期刊介绍: We all face the difficult problem of understanding and treating the perpetrators and victims of violence behavior. Violence and Victims is the evidence-based resource that informs clinical decisions, legal actions, and public policy. Now celebrating its 25th year, Violence and Victims is a peer-reviewed journal of theory, research, policy, and clinical practice in the area of interpersonal violence and victimization. It seeks to facilitate the exchange of information on this subject across such professional disciplines as psychology, sociology, criminology, law, medicine, nursing, psychiatry, and social work.
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