The Intracity Distribution of Services: A Multivariate Analysis
- 1 June 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in American Political Science Review
- Vol. 76 (2) , 371-379
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0003055400187064
Abstract
Significant differences in the distribution of public resources among neighborhoods within the same municipality have been repeatedly reported in the literature. Previous researchers have generally concluded that these differences in the distribution of governmental benefits represent “unpatterned inequality” produced by idiosyncratic events and bureaucratic decision rules. This study of the distribution of municipal expenditures for public services in New York City comes to a very different conclusion. Municipal expenditures for social services (health, welfare, and education) increase with the dependency of district populations, which suggests a compensatory model of distribution. At the same time, municipal expenditures for property-related services (fire, sanitation) increase with tax revenues, which suggests a contributory model of distribution for these services. City expenditures for police services, however, are determined by both tax contributions and degree of dependence. These findings indicate that differences in the allocation of public resources in New York City are patterned by clearly recognizable distributional criteria.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Inequality and Police Strength: Conflict Theory and Coercive Control in Metropolitan AreasAmerican Sociological Review, 1979
- The Distribution of Urban Police ServicesThe Journal of Politics, 1978
- The Distribution of Benefits in an Urban EnvironmentUrban Affairs Quarterly, 1977
- The Distribution of an Urban Public ServiceUrban Affairs Quarterly, 1977
- Organizational Effectiveness and the Institutional EnvironmentAdministrative Science Quarterly, 1975
- Urban OutcomesPublished by University of California Press ,1974
- Dependency and Vulnerability: An Exchange Approach to the Control of OrganizationsAdministrative Science Quarterly, 1974
- Influence of Environmental Support and Policy Space on Organizational BehaviorAdministrative Science Quarterly, 1973
- The Political Economy of Public OrganizationsPublic Administration Review, 1973
- Issues in Multiple RegressionAmerican Journal of Sociology, 1968