The Association Between Street Construction Projects and Community Violence in New York City.

IF 4.3 2区 医学 Q1 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL Journal of Urban Health-Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine Pub Date : 2025-01-03 DOI:10.1007/s11524-024-00946-9
Brady Bushover, Andrew Kim, Christina A Mehranbod, Leah E Roberts, Ariana N Gobaud, Evan L Eschliman, Carolyn Fish, Xiang Gao, Siddhesh Zadey, Dana E Goin, Christopher N Morrison
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Abstract

Community violence is a major cause of injury and death in the USA. Empirical studies have identified that some place-based interventions of urban private places, such as remediations of vacant lots and buildings, are associated with reductions in community violence in surrounding areas. The aim of this study was to examine whether routine maintenance and repair of urban public places (e.g., street construction projects) are also associated with reductions in community violence, proxied by violent crime incidents. This staggered adoption difference-in-difference analysis investigated the association between street construction projects and community violence in New York City from 2010 to 2019, divided into 40 calendar quarters. The units of analysis were street-quarters (n = 155,280). Intervention street-quarters were those with completed projects in 2010-2019; control streets were those where projects were scheduled but not completed before 2019. The outcome of community violence was proxied by counts of crime and violence incidents reported to the New York Police Department, within street-quarters. There were 81,904 street-quarters with any community violence incidents (52.7%). We found that street construction projects were associated with a decrease in reckless endangerment (ATT = - 1.3%; 95% CI = - 2.1%, - 0.4%), robbery (ATT = - 3.4%; 95% CI = - 6.1%, - 0.7%), and weapons offenses (ATT = - 1.6%; 95% CI = - 3.0, - 0.08%) occurring on street-quarters. Street construction projects may be yet another type of place-based intervention to reduce community violence.

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纽约市街道建设项目与社区暴力之间的关系。
在美国,社区暴力是造成伤亡的一个主要原因。实证研究已经确定,对城市私人场所的一些基于地点的干预措施,如对空地和建筑物的修复,与减少周边地区的社区暴力有关。这项研究的目的是检验城市公共场所的日常维护和维修(例如街道建设项目)是否也与以暴力犯罪事件为代表的社区暴力减少有关。这种交错采用差异分析调查了2010年至2019年纽约市街道建设项目与社区暴力之间的关系,分为40个日历季度。分析单位为街道宿舍(n = 155,280)。干预街区是指2010-2019年已完成项目的街区;控制街道是那些计划在2019年之前完成但未完成的项目。社区暴力的结果可以通过向纽约警察局报告的在街区内发生的犯罪和暴力事件的数量来反映。有81,904个街区发生社区暴力事件(52.7%)。我们发现,街道建设项目与鲁莽危害的减少有关(ATT = - 1.3%;95% CI = - 2.1%, - 0.4%),抢劫(ATT = - 3.4%;95% CI = - 6.1% - 0.7%),和武器犯罪(ATT = - 1.6%;95% CI = - 3.0, - 0.08%)。街道建设项目可能是减少社区暴力的另一种基于地点的干预措施。
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来源期刊
Journal of Urban Health-Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine
Journal of Urban Health-Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
9.10
自引率
3.00%
发文量
105
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Urban Health is the premier and authoritative source of rigorous analyses to advance the health and well-being of people in cities. The Journal provides a platform for interdisciplinary exploration of the evidence base for the broader determinants of health and health inequities needed to strengthen policies, programs, and governance for urban health. The Journal publishes original data, case studies, commentaries, book reviews, executive summaries of selected reports, and proceedings from important global meetings. It welcomes submissions presenting new analytic methods, including systems science approaches to urban problem solving. Finally, the Journal provides a forum linking scholars, practitioners, civil society, and policy makers from the multiple sectors that can influence the health of urban populations.
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