Saturday
Jan292005
Saturday, January 29, 2005 at 04:40AM
- Residential segregation exposes black youth to neighborhoods with
much higher levels of risk for violence and fewer protective factors
than the neighborhoods where other racial and ethnic groups tend to
live.
Racial and ethnic disparities in
youths' violent behavior can be largely explained by three factors -–
the types of neighborhoods where young people live, the marital status
of their parents, and whether they are first- or second-generation
immigrants –- according to a study published in the February issue of
the American Journal of Public Health. The study, conducted by Robert
J. Sampson of Harvard University and Jeffrey D. Morenoff and Stephen
Raudenbush of the University of Michigan, shows that the longstanding
gap in the racial burden of violence follows a social anatomy and is
not immutable. The odds of committing violence are almost double for
blacks as compared to whites and homicide is consistently ranked as the
leading cause of death among young black men. "The study shows that
this disparity is largely social in nature and therefore amenable to
intervention in community rather than individual settings," says
Sampson, the Henry Ford II Professor of the Social Sciences in
Harvard's Faculty of Arts and Sciences and lead author of the study.
Popular explanations of the racial gap in violence - "constitutional"
differences in IQ test scores and impulsivity or hyperactivity -accounted for only 6 percent of the racial and ethnic disparities in
violent behavior, the researchers found, while family poverty accounted
for none of the gap. [
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