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      Gentrification, White Encroachment, and the Policing of Black Residents in Washington, DC

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      Critical Criminology
      Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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          Abstract

          When middle-class and White residents move into working-class and poor Black neighborhoods, are there increases in the frequency of arrests of Black people? There are a handful of published articles that examine quantitatively the relationship between gentrification and policing. These studies focus almost exclusively on Los Angeles and New York City and the focus on racialized policing is limited. The present study considers racialized policing in a city that was, until very recently, majority Black and explores the extent to which gentrification and racial change in Washington, DC are associated with enhanced policing of Black residents. A spatial regression analysis which models the association between gentrification, White encroachment, and the policing of Black residents using arrest data from the D.C. Metropolitan Police Department and a gentrification score based on American Community Survey data reveals clear racialized and spatial disparities in arrest rates in Washington, DC. We hypothesized that census tracts experiencing gentrification and White encroachment would have higher drug arrest rates of Black residents. We found support for our White encroachment hypothesis but not for our gentrification hypothesis.

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          Change Scores as Dependent Variables in Regression Analysis

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            Displacement or Succession?

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              Specification and Estimation of Spatial Autoregressive Models with Autoregressive and Heteroskedastic Disturbances.

              This study develops a methodology of inference for a widely used Cliff-Ord type spatial model containing spatial lags in the dependent variable, exogenous variables, and the disturbance terms, while allowing for unknown heteroskedasticity in the innovations. We first generalize the GMM estimator suggested in Kelejian and Prucha (1998,1999) for the spatial autoregressive parameter in the disturbance process. We also define IV estimators for the regression parameters of the model and give results concerning the joint asymptotic distribution of those estimators and the GMM estimator. Much of the theory is kept general to cover a wide range of settings.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                Critical Criminology
                Crit Crim
                Springer Science and Business Media LLC
                1205-8629
                1572-9877
                November 13 2022
                Article
                10.1007/s10612-022-09670-9
                6a1bb95d-e757-4cf2-906b-16e3befc68b5
                © 2022

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0

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