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The Differing Effects of Economic Inequality on Black and White Rates of Violence
Miles D. Harer and Darrell Steffensmeier
Social Forces
Vol. 70, No. 4 (Jun., 1992), pp. 1035-1054
Published by: Oxford University Press
DOI: 10.2307/2580200
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/2580200
Page Count: 20
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Abstract
We examine in this article the relationship between economic inequality and rates of violent crime of blacks and whites, using SMSA-level data for 1980 as compiled from raw arrest data on index violent crimes in the FBI's Uniform Crime Reports and from the 1980 census. The analysis is disaggregated by race and uses alternative measures of inequality (and poverty) to provide more theoretically appropriate indicators of income inequality, including measures of within-race inequality in addition to measures of overall inequality and between-race inequality. Controls are included for racial composition and other variables related to race and crime. We find that the effects of inequality differ sharply for blacks and whites. Inequality strongly affects white violence rates - high inequality is associated with high white arrest rates for the violent crimes. However, inequality has a weak effect on black violence rates. The theoretical and research implications of our findings are discussed.
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Social Forces
