TY - JOUR PY - 2007// TI - Crime and segregation JO - Journal of economic behavior and organization A1 - O'Flaherty, Brendan A1 - Sethi, Rajiv SP - 391 EP - 405 VL - 64 IS - 3-4 N2 - Metropolitan areas in the United States are characterized by both geographic concentration in robbery rates, and racial segregation in residential patterns. We argue that these two phenomena are closely connected. Robberies typically involve incomplete information about the likelihood of victim resistance and offender violence. Geographic concentration in robbery rates can lead to segregation (in excess of levels that would emerge under neighborhood sorting by income) because robbers prey disproportionately on whites, believing them to be more compliant, and whites protect themselves by moving disproportionately to safer neighborhoods. Hence, conditional on income, blacks live in more dangerous neighborhoods than whites.
LA - SN - 0167-2681 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jebo.2006.07.005 ID - ref1 ER -