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Re-Operationalizing ‘Open-Country': Introducing a Place-Level Geography for the Study of Rural Crime

Re-Operationalizing ‘Open-Country': Introducing a Place-Level Geography for the Study of Rural Crime
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Author(s): Jeremy Porter (Sociology, Criminal Justice and Demography Department, City University of New York, New York City, NY, USA), Joel Capellan (Law and Justice Department, Rowan University, Glassboro, NJ, USA)and Frank Howell (Mississippi State University, Starkville, MS, USA)
Copyright: 2017
Volume: 8
Issue: 2
Pages: 13
Source title: International Journal of Applied Geospatial Research (IJAGR)
Editor(s)-in-Chief: Donald Patrick Albert (Sam Houston State University, USA)and Samuel Adu-Prah (Sam Houston State University, USA)
DOI: 10.4018/IJAGR.2017040102

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Abstract

The proper operationalization of urban and rural is extremely important to our understanding of the impacts of specific ecological context on human behavior. However, even with the ever-improving definitional advancements, our understanding of these community-level concepts, in regards to a comprehensive geographic space, is still somewhat unsatisfying. This article aims to contribute to this issue through the introduction of a ‘place' based geography using current Census geographies in the creation of a unified geographic landscape of the contiguous United States. The new place-level geography is superior to previous operational approaches to identifying urban and rural communities in that it allows for the examination of both without the additional variation inherent in larger geographies and providing a more comprehensive coverage than smaller geographies. Furthermore, this approach allows for the development of a unique, but phenomenologically meaningful, sub-county geography that substantively holds meaning in conceptualizing rural and urban ecological context.

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