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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2021 Aug 1.
Published in final edited form as: J Community Psychol. 2019 Aug 17;49(4):878–906. doi: 10.1002/jcop.22232

TABLE A3.

Social and physical environments

Community constructs Indicators Data source
Anonymity (Hipp et al., 2009) Population density US Census
Concentration of registered sex offenders (Mustaine, Tewksbury, Huff-Corzine, Corzine, & Marshall, 2014) Number of registered sex offenders divided by the total population of the census tract and multiplied by 1,000 to calculate a standardized rate Department of Corrections Sex Offender Registry
Crime-prone population (Cancino, Martinez, & Stowell, 2009) Share of population composed of males between ages of 18–34 US Census
Density of street gang activity (Robinson et al., 2009) Number of African American and Latino street gangs that existed within a 2-mile radius of each zip code’s population-weighted geographic centroid Ethnographic and observational field research
Ethnic heterogeneity (Pizarro & McGloin, 2006) Number of different ethnic or racial groups that resided in the census tract US Census
Immigration (Martinez, Stowell, & Lee, 2010) Percent of the population born outside of the United States US Census
Neighborhood abandonment (Hipp et al., 2009) Proportion of occupied units (reverse coded) US Census
Neighborhood aesthetics (Lovasi et al., 2013) Sidewalk cafes: Locations of one or more legally operating sidewalk cafes by zip code; City Department of Consumer Affairs, City Department of Parks and Recreation, and Project Scorecard conducted by Mayor’s Office
Street trees: Density of street trees per square kilometer;
Clean streets: Proportion of streets rated as acceptably clean (as informed by the Department of Sanitation’s standards and public surveys)a
Neighborhood condition (O’Shea, 2006) Physical deterioration: e.g., abandoned or unkempt housing Observational environmental survey
Incivilities: e.g., litter and vandalism
Vulnerability: e.g., dark and empty streets
Territoriality: e.g., decorating one’s yard or putting one’s name on a door
Defensible space: e.g., adequate lighting, surveillance opportunities, and barriers to entry
Disorder incidents (O’Shea, 2006) Counts of calls for service to respond to shots fired, disorder, fight, harassment, loud noise, and suspicious person or activity Observational environmental survey
Neighborhood dilapidation (Limbos & Casteel, 2008) Index of visible graffiti, painted over graffiti, litter, cleanliness, dilapidated buildings, and dilapidated streets and sidewalks Neighborhood environmental survey
Neighborhood heterogeneity (Mares, 2010) Index of the percentage foreign born resident and percentage of the tract population that speaks either an entirely different language or also uses another language on top of English US Census
Physical environment as a risk factor for crime (Heslin, Robinson, Baker, & Gelberg, 2007) Proximity to skid row, median income, percent of population of racial/ethnic minority backgrounds, percent of land area in industrial use, percent of land area in commercial use, and total population US Census
Population heterogeneity (Martinez et al., 2008) Latino percentage of the population, percentage of the population who immigrated within the past 10 years, and percentage of households that are “linguistically isolated” US Census
Population density (Morenoff et al., 2001) Number of persons per square kilometer US Census
Population structure (Messner, Baumer, & Rosenfeld, 2004) Population size and density US Census
Racial/ethnic concentration (Cubbin, LeClere, & Smith, 2000) Black: Proportion of all persons who are Black US Census
Hispanic: Proportion of all persons who are Hispanic
Residential instability (Beyer, Layde, Hamberger, & Laud (2013) Proportion of individuals living in a different house than they had 5 years before US Census Bureau and US Department of Agriculture
Residential mobility (Kubrin, 2003) Percentage of persons ages 5 and over who have changed residences in the past 5 years US Census
Residential stability (Li et al., 2010) Percentage of households staying in the same residence for at least 5 years US Census
Social and physical disorder (Messer, Maxson, & Miranda, 2013) Housing damage: Boarded door, holes in walls, roof damage, chimney damage, foundation damage, entry damage, door damage, peeling paint, fire damage, condemned, boarded windows, broken windows Community assessment projectb
Security measures: Block-level proportion of security bars, barbed wire, no trespassing signs, beware of dog signs, security signs, and fencing
Nuisances: Shopping carts, total drug paraphernalia, inoperable car, food garbage, dog waste, tree debris, discarded furniture, discarded appliances, large trash, batteries, condoms, fallen wire, broken manhole cover, uncovered drain, cigarette butts, alcohol container, clothes, baby diapers, construction debris, deep holes, standing water, litter, broken glass, high weeds, graffiti
Property disorder: Cars on lawn, no grass, standing water, litter, garbage, broken glass, discarded furniture, discarded appliances, discarded tires, inoperable vehicle, high weeds
Social deprivation (Wu, 2009) Percentage of foreign-born residents, percentage of linguistic isolation, and percentage of renters in an area US Census
Social disorganization (Kaylen & Pridemore, 2011) Residential instability: Proportion of households occupied by people who moved from another dwelling in the preceding 5 years US Census
Ethnic heterogeneity: Diversity index calculating the probability of two randomly chosen individuals (from county) being from different ethnic groups
Family disruption: Ratio of female-headed households to all households with children
Poverty: Percent of residents living under the poverty level
Population density: Population at risk for violent victimization (in our case, county populations of those aged 10–17 and 15–24) as a proxy
Urbanization (Pizarro & McGloin, 2006) Population size US Census
Vacancy rate (Papachristos, Hureau, & Braga, 2013) Percentage vacant housing US Census
a

Multiple indicators that represent some form of an index are formatted with the prefix “index of”; constructs that are represented by multiple sub-constructs are underlined and indices are separated by semi-colons; otherwise, multiple indicators that are not part of an index are separated by commas.

b

Data can be collected through observational assessment.