Urban crime often clusters in specific transitional zones regardless of which groups live there
Sociological research from the Chicago School proves that urban crime clusters in specific 'transitional zones' regardless of the ethnicity or background of the people living there.
In the 1920s, University of Chicago sociologists Robert E. Park and Ernest Burgess discovered that crime is a product of neighborhood geography rather than individual pathology. Their 'concentric zone model' identified the 'zone of transition'—an area of high poverty and population turnover surrounding the business district—as the most consistently violent part of any city.
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