Cross-Sectional and
Longitudinal Measurements of Neighborhood Experience and Their Effects
on Children
ABSTRACT
Despite the
abundance of research on neighborhoods’ effects on children,
most studies of neighborhood effects are cross-sectional,
rendering them unable to depict the dynamic nature of social
life, and obscuring important aspects of community processes
and outcomes. This study uses residential histories from the
Los Angeles Family and Neighborhood Survey and the Child
Development Supplement of the Panel Study of Income Dynamics
to explore two questions: 1) How much do residential
mobility and neighborhood change contribute to the overall
socioeconomic variation in children’s neighborhoods? 2) Does
measuring community factors at more than one point in time
matter for the conclusions that we draw from research on
“neighborhood effects” on children’s behavioral, cognitive
and health-related well-being? Results suggest that
residential mobility plays a non-trivial role over the
period of childhood in determining children’s exposure to
neighborhoods of different economic types. In addition, they
show that quantitative estimates of neighborhood effects
that allow neighborhood characteristics to vary through
residential mobility and neighborhood change do not depict a
strikingly different picture from cross-sectional estimates.
Children do not experience enough variation in their local
surroundings to produce meaningful differences between
static and dynamic measurements of neighborhoods. We also
uncover interesting regional and race/ethnic differences in
neighborhood dynamics and neighborhood effects.