J
Jodi Lane
Researcher at University of Florida
Publications - 74
Citations - 1604
Jodi Lane is an academic researcher from University of Florida. The author has contributed to research in topics: Fear of crime & Poison control. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 70 publications receiving 1466 citations.
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Women's and men's fear of gang crimes: Sexual and nonsexual assault as perceptually contemporaneous offenses
Jodi Lane,James W. Meeker +1 more
TL;DR: The authors examined the differential effects of sexual and non-sexual assault as offenses that may be coupled with specific gang crimes and found that fear of physical harm, not the sexual intrusion in rape, has the strongest effect on fear for both women and men.
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Fear of violent crime among men and women on campus: the impact of perceived risk and fear of sexual assault.
TL;DR: Examination of the individual and combined impact of perceived risk and fear of sexual assault on fear of robbery and assault among college students indicates that fear ofSexual assault is the stronger predictor of fear of crime for women and that perceived risk is the weaker predictor for men.
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Subcultural Diversity and the Fear of Crime and Gangs
Jodi Lane,James W. Meeker +1 more
TL;DR: This article examined fear of crime and gangs in Orange County, California, as measured by a randomized survey of 1,223 respondents conducted in 1995 by The Orange County Register newspaper and found that concern about subcultural diversity is a strong predictor of both types of fear.
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ethnicity, information sources, and fear of crime
Jodi Lane,James W. Meeker +1 more
TL;DR: The authors examined the effect of mass media on perceived risk and fear of crime among whites and Latinos in Orange County, California, using data from a 1997 random digit dial survey of Orange County residents.
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Fear of Gang Crime: A Look at Three Theoretical Models
Jodi Lane,James W. Meeker +1 more
TL;DR: This article found that diversity, disorder, and community concern are important predictors of gang-related fear, and that the indirect relationships between demographic characteristics, theoretical variables, and fear depend upon which model is tested.