ASC 2023: DCP Meetings & Panels

Division of Communities & Place Member Business Meeting and Social, Wed, Nov 15, 5:00 to 7:00pm, Offsite – Time Restaurant, 1315 Sansom St, Philadelphia, PA 19107

DCP Panels

Communities and Place: Crime Concentration across Place and Time, Wed, Nov 15, 8:00 to 9:20am, Franklin Hall 8, 4th Floor

Land use, time, and perceptions of crime: A geo-chronographic approach – Jonathan Corcoran, Ying Lu, Rebecca Wickes, Danielle Reynald, and Chloe Keel

Show me St. Louis: Risk assessment through an 80-20 framework – Hannah Steinman and Grant Drawve

Longitudinal analysis of crime trajectories at micro geographic locations across multiple cities in the U.S. – Xiaoshuang Luo

Sources of power and place management to reduce crime – Shannon Linning, John Eck, and Tamara Herold

Contexts that Contribute to the Root Causes of Violence in Rural and Urban Places, Wed, Nov 15, 11:00 to 12:20pm, Franklin Hall 1, 4th Floor

Keeping rural schools and communities safe: Examining risk factors for violence that challenge readiness to respond – Patricia Campie, Anthony Peguero, and Allyson Pakstis

Location, location, location: How does the small urban setting challenge readiness and its solution to school safety – Anthony Peguero, Patricia Campie, and Jonathan Scaccia

Street by street: Examining neighborhood context to understand school and community risk and readiness to prevent violence in a large urban setting – Patricia Campie, Anthony Peguero, and Ryan Fisher

Communities and Place: Policing Poverty and Perceptions of Place: Poverty, Disorder, Crime, and Perceptions of Safety, Wed, Nov 15, 5:00 to 6:20pm, Franklin Hall 4, 4th Floor

“All I do is police poverty”: The proportional and spatial shift to policing indicators of poverty – Tarah Hodgkinson, Carrie Sanders, and Samantha Henderson

Encampments and crime: Evaluating micro-level reporting patterns in response to visible homelessness – Samantha Henderson, Tarah Hodgkinson, and Carrie Sanders

Crisis in the downtown: Comparing micro-place incident and perception data – Carrie Sanders, Samantha Henderson, Tarah Hodgkinson, Carrie Condon, and Natasha Martino

Carousel of Complaint – Marcus Sibley and Carrie Sanders

Public Spaces, Crime, and Victimization, Wed, Nov 15, 5:00 to 6:20pm, Room 410, 4th Floor

Active guardianship at public places: The role of place type and place attachment – Renee Zahnow

Greener the safer? Effects of urban green on street crime and safety perception using satellite imagery – Qian He, Chunwu Zhu, Weishan Bai, Weichen Guo, Ling Wu, and Xinyue Ye

Neighbor or nuisance? Student and faculty perceptions of homelessness in Denver – Ben Scanlan and Raya Castronovo

Running for fun, not my life! A spatial analysis of crime at public recreation sites – Matthew Spencer and Cory Schnell

Communities and Place: Race, Immigration, and Hate Crimes, Thu, Nov 16, 9:30 to 10:50am, Salon C, 5th Floor

The geography of (reasonable) suspicion: Rethinking causes of racial disparities in police stops – Rachel Lautenschlager

Racial resistance, protests, and racial disparities in social control: Examining the historical and contemporary context of racial injustice and arrests – Karen Parker, Andrew Gray, and Cresean Hughes

Spatial contextual analyses of the immigration-neighborhood crime link – Carol Chen

Anti-LGBTQ hate crime and pace in Washington D.C: A multilevel analysis – Casey Kindall

Special DCP Thematic Panel: Addressing Race/Ethnicity, Equity, and Justice in Research on Communities and Place, Thu, Nov 16, 2:00 to 3:20pm, Franklin Hall 13, 4th Floor

Moderator: Karen Parker

Panelists: Shaun Gabbidon, Maria Velez, Patricia Warren, and Yasser Payne

Communities and Place: Social Disorganization, Violence, and Toxic Places, Thu, Nov 16, 2:00 to 3:20pm, Room 404, 4th Floor

Neighborhood disorganization and deaths by homicide and suicide – Christopher Contreras

The punishment of toxic neighborhoods: Environmental harms and community stigma – Matthew McLeskey

Sociospatial marginalization and violent crime: Theorizing the presence of toxic facilities beyond opportunity – Seth Williams

Disentangling COVID-19 containment policies and aggravated assault in Philadelphia, PA – Hannah Steinman

Communities and Place: Innovations in Communities and Place Research, Fri, Nov 17, 9:30 to 10:50am, Franklin Hall 8, 4th Floor

Learning statistics for communities and place research: A new textbook and workbook using open-source software – Martin A. Andresen

Uniting campus and community: Extending PBIS and restorative practice from schools to neighborhoods – Charlotte Gill and Madeline McPherson

Crime, premises security, and low-income housing: Translating criminological knowledge into actional legal outcomes – Kevin Gotham and Danel Kennedy

What is a neighborhood? A review of criminological literature, 2010-2020 – Tyler Mierzwa, Shannon Linning, Jeremy Cheung, John Eck, and Ajima Olaghere

New Contexts in Communities and Crime Research, Fri, Nov 17, 2:00 to 3:20pm, Room 410, 4th Floor

Do neighborhoods play a role by the explanation of extremism? – Sebastian Kurtenbach

Policing Yale: How policing shapes neighborhood segregation and inequality in New Haven, CT – Adam Pittman and Cassi Meyerhoffer

The truly disinvested: Communities, extreme social isolation, and the political economy of death – Jacob Stowell and Ramiro Martinez

Love thy (online) neighbor- Developing an online neighborhood network efficacy scale – MariTere Molinet

Communities and Place: Setting an Agenda for Neighborhoods, Race, and Crime Research in the 21st Century, Fri, Nov 17, 3:30 to 4:50pm, Room 407, 4th Floor

Concentration at the extremes and race/ethnic disparities in neighborhood violence: Evidence from the national neighborhood crime study – Man Kei, Thomas NcNutly, Paul Bellair, and Arlana Henry

Latino communities, social organization, and victimization: A study of El Paso, TX neighborhood – Maria Beatriz Velez and Christopher Lyons

Disentangling the association between racial change, neighborhood economic change, and crime – Lexi Gill and Lyndsay Boggess

Within and between-group violence: Is intergroup violence more likely to occur where contiguous neighborhoods differ? – Lyndsay Boggess and Alyssa Chamberlain