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Journal ArticleDOI

Love Thy Neighbor? Moral Communities, Civic Engagement, and Juvenile Homicide in Rural Areas

Matthew R. Lee, +1 more
- 01 Mar 2004 - 
- Vol. 82, Iss: 3, pp 1001-1035
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TLDR
In this paper, the authors investigated the protective effects of civically engaged religious denominations on juvenile family, acquaintance, and stranger homicides in rural counties, and found that the presence of politically engaged religious adherents is inversely associated with juvenile homicide in rural areas, but this protective effect is primarily confined to juvenile family homicides.
Abstract
While juvenile homicide garnered a tremendous amount of attention from the general public, the media, and policymakers around 1990, macro-level research examining intercommunity variations in juvenile homicide is generally sparse. In addition, most studies addressing this topic focus on urban areas, neglecting the equally important issue of juvenile homicide in rural communities. This analysis extends prior research by investigating the structural sources of variation in rural juvenile homicide rates and by examining the influence of religion on this phenomenon. Informing our analyses with theoretical insights drawn from the moral communities and civil society literatures, we investigate the protective effects of civically engaged religious denominations on juvenile family, acquaintance, and stranger homicides in rural counties. For comparative purposes, we also perform parallel analyses on a sample of urban areas. The empirical analyses of county-level data using negative binomial regression estimation techniques indicate that the presence of civically engaged religious adherents is inversely associated with juvenile homicide in rural areas (net of the effects of a range of control variables), but that this protective effect is primarily confined to juvenile family homicides. In contrast, the measure of civically engaged denominations has no effect on juvenile homicide in urban areas. We conclude with a discussion of the theoretical importance of these findings and directions for future research.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Social Capital, Too Much of a Good Thing? American Religious Traditions and Community Crime

TL;DR: Using American religious traditions as measures of bonding and bridging social capital in communities, the authors empirically test how these different forms of social capital affect crime rates in 3,157 U.S. counties in 2000.
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Social capital and civic action: A network-based approach

TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose that social capital, defined as resources embedded in individual and organizational networks, produces expressive and instrumental civic actions, and use the 2000 Social Capital Benchmark Survey data to examine the hypothesis.
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The Radius of Trust: Religion, Social Embeddedness and Trust in Strangers

TL;DR: This paper examined relationships among measures of religious orientation, embeddedness in social networks and the level of trust individuals direct toward others using data from the 2002 Religion and Public Activism Survey and found that older persons and those who are more trusting of acquaintances show greater trust.
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The Externalities of Strong Social Capital: Post-Tsunami Recovery in Southeast India

TL;DR: This article used qualitative methods to analyse data from villages in Tamil Nadu, India following the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, demonstrating that high levels of social capital simultaneously provided strong benefits and equally strong negative externalities, especially to those already on the periphery of society.
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Social, not physical, infrastructure: the critical role of civil society after the 1923 Tokyo earthquake.

TL;DR: Social capital, more than earthquake damage, population density, human capital, or economic capital, best predicts population recovery in post-earthquake Tokyo, and new approaches for research on social capital and disasters are suggested.
References
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TL;DR: In this paper, the concept of social capital is introduced and illustrated, its forms are described, the social structural conditions under which it arises are examined, and it is used in an analys...
Book

Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community

TL;DR: Putnam as mentioned in this paper showed that changes in work, family structure, age, suburban life, television, computers, women's roles and other factors are isolating Americans from each other in a trend whose reflection can clearly be seen in British society.
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TL;DR: Social capital has a definite place in sociological theory as mentioned in this paper, and its role in social control, in family support, and in benefits mediated by extra-familial networks, but excessive extensions of the concept may lead to excessive emphasis on positive consequences of sociability.
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Neighborhoods and Violent Crime: A Multilevel Study of Collective Efficacy

TL;DR: Multilevel analyses showed that a measure of collective efficacy yields a high between-neighborhood reliability and is negatively associated with variations in violence, when individual-level characteristics, measurement error, and prior violence are controlled.
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose Continuous Outcomes Binary Outcomes Testing and Fit Ordinal Outcomes Numeric Outcomes and Numeric Numeric Count Outcomes (NOCO).
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