Record Details

Assessing the Effects of Recent Immigration on Serious Property Crime in Austin, Texas

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

Field Value
Title Assessing the Effects of Recent Immigration on Serious Property Crime in Austin, Texas
Names Stansfield, Richard (creator)
Akins, Scott (creator)
Rumbaut, Ruben G. (creator)
Hammer, Roger B. (creator)
Date Issued 2013 (iso8601)
Note This is the publisher’s final pdf. The article is copyrighted by the Pacific Sociological Association and published by the University of California Press. It can be found at: http://ucpressjournals.com/journal.php?j=sop.
Abstract In this article the authors examine the impact of recent
immigration on rates of serious property crime across communities in
Austin, Texas. The greater Austin foreign-born population has increased
by more than 580 percent since 1980, and Austin is considered a “pre-emerging” immigrant gateway city to the United States. The changing
population dynamics in Austin provide an excellent opportunity to study
the effect of recent immigration on crime in a target destination for recent
immigrants. Although interest in the relationship between violent crime
and immigration to new locales is evidenced by recent studies that show
less favorable outcomes for Latinos in new destinations, little attention has
been directed to the relationship of recent immigration with serious property
crime in new destinations. Negative binomial regression models with
corrections for spatial autocorrelation indicate that recent immigration is
not associated with an increased rate of burglary, larceny, or motor vehicle
theft once important structural predictors of crime are controlled for.
Genre Article
Topic immigration
Identifier Stansfield, R., Akins, S., Rumbaut, R. G., & Hammer, R. B. (2013). Assessing the Effects of Recent Immigration on Serious Property Crime in Austin, Texas. Sociological Perspectives, 56(4), 647-672. doi:10.1525/sop.2013.56.4.647

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