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Kimberly Lochner

Researcher at Harvard University

Publications -  7
Citations -  5838

Kimberly Lochner is an academic researcher from Harvard University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Social capital & Social mobility. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 7 publications receiving 5619 citations.

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Social capital, income inequality, and mortality.

TL;DR: Data from this cross-sectional ecologic study support the notion that income inequality leads to increased mortality via disinvestment in social capital.
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Social capital: a guide to its measurement

TL;DR: The primary aims of this paper are to review the concept of social capital and related constructs and to provide a brief guide to their operationalization and measurement, focusing on four existing constructs: collective efficacy, psychological sense of community, neighborhood cohesion and community competence.
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Social capital, income inequality, and firearm violent crime.

TL;DR: The profound effects of income inequality and social capital, when controlling for other factors such as poverty and firearm availability, on firearm violent crime indicate that policies that address these broader, macro-social forces warrant serious consideration.
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Social capital and neighborhood mortality rates in Chicago.

TL;DR: Higher levels of neighborhood social capital were associated with lower neighborhood death rates for total mortality as well as death from heart disease and "other" causes for White men and women and, to a less consistent extent, for Blacks, but there was no association between social capital and cancer mortality.
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Neighborhood differences in social capital: a compositional artifact or a contextual construct?

TL;DR: Examination of socioeconomic and demographic attributes that systematically correlate with individual perception of social capital and the extent to which such attributes account for neighborhood differences in social capital suggest that significant neighborhood differences remain in individual perceptions of trust, substantiating the notion of socialCapital as a true contextual construct.