Document Type
Article
Abstract
The research in this article examines the effect on crime rates of public housing transformation in Atlanta and Chicago, focusing on the neighborhoods receiving households relocated with housing vouchers. Modeling the complex relationship between voucher holder locations and crime, using quarterly data, our analysis found that crime rates fell substantially in neighborhoods with public housing demolition, whereas destination neighborhoods experienced a much lesser effect than popular accounts imply. Nevertheless, on average, negative effects emerge for some neighborhoods with modest or high densities of relocated households compared with conditions in areas without relocated households. Overall, we estimate small net decreases citywide in violent crime over study periods during which crime declined significantly. These findings suggest a need for thoughtful relocation strategies that support both assisted residents and receiving communities.
Disciplines
Social Policy | Social Welfare | Urban Studies and Planning
Recommended Citation
Popkin, S. J., Rich, M. J., Hendey, L., et. al. (2012). Public Housing Transformation and Crime: Making the Case for Responsible Relocation. Cityscape 14(3): 137-160.