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  • Tenure social mix and perceptions of antisocial behaviour: An Australian example

    Author(s)
    Baum, Scott
    Arthurson, Kathy
    Han, Jung Hoon
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Baum, Scott
    Year published
    2015
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Abstract
    Antisocial behaviour including littering and graffiti, crime and social disorder pose an important social problem within contemporary cities. Perceptions regarding the extent of antisocial behaviour are likely to differ not only along socioeconomic and demographic lines of the individual but importantly are also likely to differ depending on the type of neighbourhood or community one resides in. In particular, it is often assumed that antisocial behaviour, both real and perceived, will be higher in localities characterised by higher levels of public housing. Situated broadly in the antisocial behaviour and neighbourhood ...
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    Antisocial behaviour including littering and graffiti, crime and social disorder pose an important social problem within contemporary cities. Perceptions regarding the extent of antisocial behaviour are likely to differ not only along socioeconomic and demographic lines of the individual but importantly are also likely to differ depending on the type of neighbourhood or community one resides in. In particular, it is often assumed that antisocial behaviour, both real and perceived, will be higher in localities characterised by higher levels of public housing. Situated broadly in the antisocial behaviour and neighbourhood effects/social mix literature this paper examines perceptions of antisocial behaviour reported in a large sample survey in Australia focusing specifically on how responses differ by the housing social mix characteristics of the neighbourhood the respondent lives in.
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    Journal Title
    Urban Studies
    Volume
    52
    Issue
    12
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1177/0042098014541160
    Subject
    Urban and regional planning
    Urban and regional planning not elsewhere classified
    Applied economics
    Human geography
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/124988
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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