Description

Book Synopsis
Collective efficacy is a neighborhood-level concept in which community members create a sense of agency and assume ownership for the state of their local community. This concept is one of several forms of formal and informal social control that predict the overall functioning of a community. In this book, the authors examine collective efficacy and crime in eight Miami-Dade County, Florida neighborhoods, based on data they collected from across the country and in the Miami-Dade neighborhoods themselves. They discuss findings relevant to the theory of collective efficacy itself, ramifications for its use within communities, and make recommendations for future research and for translating these results into actionable, crime prevention activities.

Trade Review
The approaches to fostering collective efficacy in local neighborhoods has been key to the work that is being done across various neighborhoods in Los Angeles. The work outlined in this book was instrumental in allowing us to also measure the impact of collective efficacy and to frame critical discussions with our partners in law enforcement and across the community. This work is essential to furthering the approach of community policing across urban communities in the U.S. -- Angelica M. Solis, Director of Community Development for Youth Policy Institute
This is a critical piece in advancing and setting the research agenda for crime and the social environment of neighborhoods. For too long, criminological research focused on programs and interventions with to little attention paid to the communities impacted by crime. Not content to just build on prior works, this book brings an important level of scrutiny to prior efforts at measuring and explaining social factors relating to crime and provides a road map both for future research and critical review of such efforts. This impressive study and important publication will guide research on how community attributes discourage or promote disorder and crime. Most importantly, it re-focuses research on the most elemental of relationships impacting crime; that between neighborhoods and the people who inhabit them. -- Matthew Perkins, Senior Program Officer of the Community Safety Initiative at LISC
Uchida and his colleagues should be commended for their work, which helps move ‘collective efficacy’ from theory to practice. They give us solid evidence on how social cohesion works to reduce crime, and solid information that will positively impact police policy and practice. -- James R. Coldren Jr., Managing Director of Justice Programs at the CNA Institute for Public Research

Table of Contents
Chapter 1: Community, Crime Control, and Collective Efficacy Chapter 2: Methodology Chapter 3: Psychometric Properties of the New Collective Efficacy Scale Chapter 4: The Relationships between Perceptions of Collective Efficacy and Social Cohesion and Outcome Variables Chapter 5: Assessing Heterogeneity in Perceptions of Collective Efficacy and Social Cohesion across Neighborhoods Chapter 6: Exploring the Predictors of Perceptions of Collective Efficacy and Perceptions of Social Cohesion Chapter 7: Within Neighborhood Variation in Collective Efficacy and Social Cohesion Chapter 8: Conclusions and Discussion for Future Research Chapter 9: Conclusions and Discussion for Future Policy

Community Crime Control and Collective Efficacy

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    £79.20

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    RRP £88.00 – you save £8.80 (10%)

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Sat 20 Jun 2026.

    A Hardback by Craig D. Uchida, Marc L. Swatt, Shellie E. Solomon

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      View other formats and editions of Community Crime Control and Collective Efficacy by Craig D. Uchida

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 1/30/2015 12:10:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781498517461, 978-1498517461
      ISBN10: 1498517463

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Collective efficacy is a neighborhood-level concept in which community members create a sense of agency and assume ownership for the state of their local community. This concept is one of several forms of formal and informal social control that predict the overall functioning of a community. In this book, the authors examine collective efficacy and crime in eight Miami-Dade County, Florida neighborhoods, based on data they collected from across the country and in the Miami-Dade neighborhoods themselves. They discuss findings relevant to the theory of collective efficacy itself, ramifications for its use within communities, and make recommendations for future research and for translating these results into actionable, crime prevention activities.

      Trade Review
      The approaches to fostering collective efficacy in local neighborhoods has been key to the work that is being done across various neighborhoods in Los Angeles. The work outlined in this book was instrumental in allowing us to also measure the impact of collective efficacy and to frame critical discussions with our partners in law enforcement and across the community. This work is essential to furthering the approach of community policing across urban communities in the U.S. -- Angelica M. Solis, Director of Community Development for Youth Policy Institute
      This is a critical piece in advancing and setting the research agenda for crime and the social environment of neighborhoods. For too long, criminological research focused on programs and interventions with to little attention paid to the communities impacted by crime. Not content to just build on prior works, this book brings an important level of scrutiny to prior efforts at measuring and explaining social factors relating to crime and provides a road map both for future research and critical review of such efforts. This impressive study and important publication will guide research on how community attributes discourage or promote disorder and crime. Most importantly, it re-focuses research on the most elemental of relationships impacting crime; that between neighborhoods and the people who inhabit them. -- Matthew Perkins, Senior Program Officer of the Community Safety Initiative at LISC
      Uchida and his colleagues should be commended for their work, which helps move ‘collective efficacy’ from theory to practice. They give us solid evidence on how social cohesion works to reduce crime, and solid information that will positively impact police policy and practice. -- James R. Coldren Jr., Managing Director of Justice Programs at the CNA Institute for Public Research

      Table of Contents
      Chapter 1: Community, Crime Control, and Collective Efficacy Chapter 2: Methodology Chapter 3: Psychometric Properties of the New Collective Efficacy Scale Chapter 4: The Relationships between Perceptions of Collective Efficacy and Social Cohesion and Outcome Variables Chapter 5: Assessing Heterogeneity in Perceptions of Collective Efficacy and Social Cohesion across Neighborhoods Chapter 6: Exploring the Predictors of Perceptions of Collective Efficacy and Perceptions of Social Cohesion Chapter 7: Within Neighborhood Variation in Collective Efficacy and Social Cohesion Chapter 8: Conclusions and Discussion for Future Research Chapter 9: Conclusions and Discussion for Future Policy

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