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Process / pipelineNeighborhood and community criminology

Social Disorganization Analysis

Social disorganization analysis explains why crime concentrates in some neighborhoods regardless of who lives there, tracing it to community structural conditions rather than individual pathology. Building on Shaw and McKay's classic Chicago studies, it argues that poverty, residential instability, and ethnic heterogeneity undermine a neighborhood's capacity for informal social control, which in turn raises crime and delinquency — a chain that Sampson and Groves later tested empirically with survey-based measures of community social ties.

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Sources

  1. Sampson, R. J., & Groves, W. B. (1989). Community structure and crime: Testing social-disorganization theory. American Journal of Sociology, 94(4), 774–802. DOI: 10.1086/229068
  2. Shaw, C. R., & McKay, H. D. (1969). Juvenile Delinquency and Urban Areas (Rev. ed.). University of Chicago Press. (Original work published 1942) ISBN: 9780226751252

How to cite this page

ScholarGate. (2026, June 22). Social Disorganization Theory and Neighborhood Crime Analysis. ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/en/criminology/social-disorganization-analysis

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ScholarGateSocial Disorganization Analysis (Social Disorganization Theory and Neighborhood Crime Analysis). Retrieved 2026-06-24 from https://scholargate.app/en/criminology/social-disorganization-analysis · Dataset: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20539026