Local businesses as attractors or preventers of neighborhood disorder
Publication date
2012
Authors
Steenbeek, W.
Völker, B.
Flap, H.
Oort, F.G. van
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
Metadata
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License
(c) UU Universiteit Utrecht, 2012
Abstract
While businesses may attract potential offenders and thus be conducive to
disorder, the number of employees could offset this by exercising social
control on offenders. This study uses data from different sources to test
this expectation across 278 Dutch neighborhoods in the four largest cities
of the Netherlands, using multivariate multilevel analysis to disentangle
individual perception differences of disorder and neighborhood effects.
Attention is paid to traditional explanations of disorder (i.e., poverty, residential
mobility, and ethnic heterogeneity). Results show a positive relationship
between business presence and neighborhood disorder. We do not find
consistent results of the number of employees (i.e., bigger businesses are
not always better or worse). Our research demonstrates that the presence of neighborhood businesses could rival the effects of social disorganization
theory.
Keywords
neighborhood disorder, nonresidential land use, place manager