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3 Crim. Just. 5 (2003)

handle is hein.journals/crmcj3 and id is 1 raw text is: 

                                                     ARTICLES


                                           Criminal justice
                                    Q 2003 SAGE Publications
                                      London, Thousand Oaks
                                           and New Delhi.
                                     1466-8025(200302) 3:1;
                                     Vol. 3(1): 5-27; 030453




Perceived collective efficacy

and women's victimization in

public housing


WALTER   S. DEKESEREDY, MARTIN D.
SCHWARTZ, SHAHID ALVI AND
E. ANDREAS TOMASZEWSKI
Ohio  University, Ohio  University, University of
St. Thomas  and  Eastern  Michigan  University


Abstract

Although it has not yet been applied to domestic violence and
other types of crime in Canadian public housing, the social
disorganization/collective efficacy model described in this article
may help explain why people who live in such areas characterized
by poverty and joblessness report higher rates of intimate partner
violence and several other offenses than those living in more
affluent communities. Using data generated by the Quality of
Neighborhood Life Survey, a main objective of the Canadian study
described here was to test this model. One of the most important
findings is that community concerns about street crimes and
informal means of social control designed to prevent such harms
are not effective forms of alleviating intimate partner violence in
public housing.

Key Words

Canada  * community * housing * victimization * women


It is not unusual even for those close to the scene to presume that domestic
violence rates are low in public housing complexes, because, as Raphael
quotes one social worker, 'the women in public housing projects actually
live alone with their children and men aren't allowed to be there' (2001:


5

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