Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects

Date of Degree

2-2026

Document Type

Doctoral Dissertation

Degree Name

Doctor of Philosophy

Program

Criminal Justice

Advisor

Samantha Majic

Committee Members

Kevin Wolff

Brian Lawton

Gerald Markowitz

Subject Categories

Criminology | Other Public Health | Other Sociology

Keywords

Gentrification, Lead Poisoning, Youth Violence, New York City, Slow Violence, Structural Violence

Abstract

Using mixed-methods (GIS analysis, spatial regression models, walking ethnographies, semistructured open-ended interviews), my dissertation explores gentrification’s distribution across New York City. Specifically, I consider the relationship between childhood lead poisoning and youth violence rates across neighborhoods in the city, and what explains variations (if any) in these rates across different gentrified and un-gentrified neighborhoods. My findings challenge the claims of so-called “pragmatic” public health researchers and municipal policymakers that gentrification may facilitate the reduction or elimination of lead poisoning and street crime. In fact, my quantitative analysis revealed no correlation between gentrification and youth violence, and also identified an outlier neighborhood (i.e., Greenpoint) that challenged the predictions of the existing gentrification-health literature by demonstrating high rates of both gentrification and lead poisoning. My qualitative research here revealed that, rather than reduce or eliminate lead poisoning, gentrification obscures it through developer-state relations that hide the true extent of lead toxins in the soil.

This work is embargoed and will be available for download on Tuesday, February 01, 2028

Share

COinS