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Study finds social networks are key to city violence

"Risk factors like race and poverty are not the predictors they have been assumed to be," said Papachristos, "It's who you hang out with that gets you into trouble. It's tragic, but not random."

"The study, co-authored with Christopher Wildeman from the Yale Department of Sociology, likens to a blood-borne pathogen. In the analysis, published Nov. 14 in The American Journal of Public Health, Papachristos notes that crime, like a disease, follows certain patterns. People in the same social network, he said, are more likely to engage in similar risky behaviors—like carrying a firearm or taking part in criminal activities—which increases the probability of victimization...."

http://phys.org/news/2013-11-social-networks-key-city-violence.html

 

 

 

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