超越邻里:活动空间和生态网络作为青年发展的背景。

IF 0.4 Q4 URBAN STUDIES
Cityscape Pub Date : 2014-01-01
Christopher R Browning, Brian Soller
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引用次数: 0

摘要

许多学者、政策分析家和实践者都认为,社区是城市青年的重要环境。然而,尽管经过了几十年的研究,我们对社区为什么以及如何影响年轻人日常生活的认识仍在不断发展。关于社区效应的理论主要假设社区通过基于暴露的机制来影响青少年。然而,现有的理论方法忽略了社区社会经济背景影响城市居民日常空间暴露或活动空间的过程。在本文中,我们认为,接触组织、机构和其他具有个人活动空间特征的环境是社区影响青年成就的关键机制。此外,我们假设共享的本地暴露的总体模式(由生态网络概念捕获)受到社区社会经济特征的影响,并对社区青年产生独立的影响。由于日常的传统活动,居民在空间上更广泛地相交的社区将表现出更高水平的与青年福祉相关的社会资本,包括(1)熟悉度,(2)有益的(弱的)社会关系,(3)信任,(4)对亲社会青年行为的共同期望(集体效能),以及(5)对公共空间的一致监控能力。然后,我们考虑生态网络对理解环境暴露复杂性的影响。我们特别讨论了嵌入性在生态社区中的作用,即以较高的频率相交的行动者和地点集群,以理解地理上定义的社区无法充分捕捉的上下文影响。最后,我们概述了数据收集的新方法,这些方法结合了从活动空间和生态网络角度对社区和环境对青年的影响的见解。我们的方法提供了(1)一个新的理论方法来理解社区社会经济特征与社区社会资本的青年相关维度之间的联系;(2)将传统上理解的地理社区内部或以外的环境影响概念化的基础;(3)一套方法论工具和资源,以更准确地解决情境影响的机制。对城市社区日常活动结构的原因和后果的研究将阐明导致弱势社区青年结果受损的社会过程,并增强有效的面向青年的干预能力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Moving Beyond Neighborhood: Activity Spaces and Ecological Networks As Contexts for Youth Development.

Moving Beyond Neighborhood: Activity Spaces and Ecological Networks As Contexts for Youth Development.

Moving Beyond Neighborhood: Activity Spaces and Ecological Networks As Contexts for Youth Development.

Many scholars, policy analysts, and practitioners agree that neighborhoods are important contexts for urban youth. Yet, despite decades of research, our knowledge of why and how neighborhoods influence the day-to-day lives of youth is still emerging. Theories about neighborhood effects largely assume that neighborhoods operate to influence youth through exposure-based mechanisms. Extant theoretical approaches, however, have neglected the processes by which neighborhood socioeconomic contexts influence the routine spatial exposures-or activity spaces-of urban residents. In this article, we argue that exposure to organizations, institutions, and other settings that characterize individual activity spaces is a key mechanism through which neighborhoods influence youth outcomes. Moreover, we hypothesize that aggregate patterns of shared local exposure-captured by the concept of ecological networks-are influenced by neighborhood socioeconomic characteristics and are independently consequential for neighborhood youth. Neighborhoods in which residents intersect in space more extensively as a result of routine conventional activities will exhibit higher levels of social capital relevant to youth well-being, including (1) familiarity, (2) beneficial (weak) social ties, (3) trust, (4) shared expectations for pro-social youth behavior (collective efficacy), and (5) the capacity for consistent monitoring of public space. We then consider the implications of ecological networks for understanding the complexities of contextual exposure. We specifically discuss the role of embeddedness in ecological communities-that is, clusters of actors and locations that intersect at higher rates-for understanding contextual influences that are inadequately captured by geographically defined neighborhoods. We conclude with an overview of new approaches to data collection that incorporate insights from an activity-space and ecological-network perspective on neighborhood and contextual influences on youth. Our approach offers (1) a new theoretical approach to understanding the links between neighborhood socioeconomic characteristics and youth-relevant dimensions of neighborhood social capital; (2) a basis for conceptualizing contextual influences that vary within, or extend beyond, traditionally understood geographic neighborhoods; and (3) a suite of methodological tools and resources to address the mechanisms of contextual influence more precisely. Research into the causes and consequences of urban neighborhood routine activity structures will illuminate the social processes accounting for compromised youth outcomes in disadvantaged neighborhoods and enhance the capacity for effective youth-oriented interventions.

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Cityscape
Cityscape URBAN STUDIES-
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