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Housing and Homicide

by John M. Hagedorn

Jul 1, 2004
  • Children and Youth
  • Crime and Safety
  • Housing and Homelessness

  • DESCRIPTION

In the 1990s, homicide and violent crime dropped dramatically in New York City but not in Chicago. No single factor can fully explain the reasons for Chicago's persistently high rates of violence. Our data suggest Chicago's homicide rate stayed high while New York City's dropped because of: 1) Continuing disputes over drug markets by Chicago's institutionalized gangs; 2) Police tactics that fractured gang leadership; and 3) Surprisingly, displacement caused by the demolition of public housing Our studies have concluded that a city's housing policy is one crucial component in any effective effort to reduce violence.

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Housing and Homicide

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WHAT TO READ NEXT

  • Youth On the Streets and On Their Own: Youth Homelessness in Illinois
  • Housing and Public Safety

Published By

  • Chicago Coalition for the Homeless

Copyright

  • Copyright 2004 Chicago Coalition for the Homeless. All rights reserved.

Document Type

  • Text

Language

  • English
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This web page is marked up with Schema.org microdata and formatted for machine-reading. Here's why that matters. Have a peek at what a machine sees here .

Title: Housing and Homicide
Publication date 2004-07-01
Publication Year 2004
Authors John M. Hagedorn
Copyright holder(s) Chicago Coalition for the Homeless
Keywords gangs , displaced , public housing , housing policy , affordable housing
Document type Text
Language English
URL: https://www.issuelab.org/resource/housing-and-homicide.html
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