TY - JOUR PY - 1998// TI - Defended Neighborhoods, Integration, and Racially Motivated Crime JO - American journal of sociology A1 - Green, Donald P. A1 - Strolovitch, Dara Z. A1 - Wong, Janelle S. SP - 372 EP - 403 VL - 104 IS - 2 N2 - This article investigates demographic and macroeconomic correlates of racially motivated anti-minority crime in New York City (1987-95). Event count models indicate that crimes directed against Asians, Latinos, and blacks are most frequent in predominantly white areas, particularly those that had experienced an in-migration of minorities. No relationship is found between rates of racially motivated crime and macroeconomic conditions, such as the rate of unemployment among non-Hispanic whites; nor does there appear to be an interaction between economic conditions and in-migration of minorities. These findings seem to parallel ethnographic accounts of "defended" white urban neighborhoods. The article concludes by discussing the empirical implications of this theoretical perspective as applied to prejudice-based crime in other contexts.
LA - SN - 0002-9602 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/210042 ID - ref1 ER -