Department

Sociology and Criminal Justice

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

1-2-2025

Embargo Period

7-21-2025

Abstract

Research on neighborhood social organization and crime typically conceptualizes neighborhood change on the order of decades, even though the local social contexts that individuals experience change daily through mobility for work, errands and recreation. In this study, the authors analyze data from the Seattle Neighborhoods and Crime Survey linked to the Census Transportation Planning Products to investigate whether within-day changes in neighborhood diversity are associated with an individual’s social cohesion and fear of crime. The authors find that individuals living in neighborhoods where diversity increases during the daytime tend to report more social cohesion and relatively less fear of crime. Importantly, these relationships are observed only among white respondents, with implications for whether processes of racialization in diverse neighborhood contexts account for this tendency. Results from this study highlight how the “mobility turn” within theories about neighborhood effects would benefit from considering how the contexts themselves change throughout the day.

Journal Title

Socius: Sociological Research for a Dynamic World

Journal ISSN

2378-0231

Volume

11

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

10.1177/23780231241309224

Comments

This article received funding through Kennesaw State University's Faculty Open Access Publishing Fund, supported by the KSU Library System and KSU Office of Research.

Included in

Sociology Commons

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