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100 _aCraw, Michael
_955948
245 _aRecidivism and Neighborhood Governance/
260 _bSage,
_c2020.
300 _a Vol 56, Issue 4, 2020:( 1263-1292 p.).
520 _aRecent research on recidivism emphasizes the importance of neighborhoods to successful prisoner reentry. This research analyzes two ways in which institutions of neighborhood governance affect reentry. First, offenders in neighborhoods with institutions supporting social control may have more success in reintegrating into the community. Second, neighborhood institutions may create barriers to entry for ex-offenders more likely to reoffend. To test this, we combine Arkansas Department of Corrections data on offenders returning to Little Rock between 2004 and 2014 with geocoded data on neighborhood and homeowner associations. We analyze this data using Cox proportional hazards and two-stage residual inclusion models of recidivism hazard. We find that a significant relationship exists between recidivism hazard and neighborhood governance, but that this is attributable to nonrandom assignment of ex-offenders to neighborhoods rather than the role neighborhood organizations play in facilitating reentry.
700 _aBensel, Tusty ten
_955949
773 0 _09296
_916911
_dSage Publications
_tUrban Affairs Review
856 _uhttps://doi.org/10.1177/1078087418809946
942 _2ddc
_cEJR
999 _c13841
_d13841