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Chicago school (sociology)



 
 
In sociology
Sociology

Sociology is a branch of the social sciences that uses systematic methods of Empiricism and critical theory to develop and refine a body of knowledge about human social structure and activity, sometimes with the goal of applying such knowledge to the pursuit of social welfare....
 and later criminology
Criminology

Criminology is the social science approach to the study of crime as an individual and social phenomenon. Criminological research areas include the incidence and forms of crime as well as its causes and consequences....
, the Chicago School (sometimes described as the Ecological School) refers to the first major body of works emerging during the 1920s and 1930s specialising in urban sociology
Urban sociology

Urban sociology is the Sociology study of social life and human interaction in metropolitan areas. It is a normative discipline of sociology seeking to study the structures, processes, changes and problems of an urban area and by doing so providing inputs for planning and policy making....
, and the research into the urban environment by combining theory and ethnographic
Ethnography

Ethnography is a genre of writing that uses fieldwork to provide a descriptive study of human societies. Ethnography presents the results of a holism research method founded on the idea that a system's properties cannot necessarily be accurately understood independently of each other....
 fieldwork in Chicago
Chicago

Chicago is the largest city in the U.S. state of Illinois and the Midwestern United States, as well as the List of United States cities by population city in the United States with more than 2.8 million residents....
, now applied elsewhere. While involving scholars at several Chicago area universities, the term is often used interchangeably to refer to the University of Chicago
University of Chicago

The University of Chicago is a private university located principally in the Hyde Park, Chicago neighborhood of Chicago. Although an older university by the same name existed prior to its founding, the modern University of Chicago credits its founding to the oil magnate John D....
's sociology department—one of the oldest and one of the most prestigious.






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Encyclopedia


In sociology
Sociology

Sociology is a branch of the social sciences that uses systematic methods of Empiricism and critical theory to develop and refine a body of knowledge about human social structure and activity, sometimes with the goal of applying such knowledge to the pursuit of social welfare....
 and later criminology
Criminology

Criminology is the social science approach to the study of crime as an individual and social phenomenon. Criminological research areas include the incidence and forms of crime as well as its causes and consequences....
, the Chicago School (sometimes described as the Ecological School) refers to the first major body of works emerging during the 1920s and 1930s specialising in urban sociology
Urban sociology

Urban sociology is the Sociology study of social life and human interaction in metropolitan areas. It is a normative discipline of sociology seeking to study the structures, processes, changes and problems of an urban area and by doing so providing inputs for planning and policy making....
, and the research into the urban environment by combining theory and ethnographic
Ethnography

Ethnography is a genre of writing that uses fieldwork to provide a descriptive study of human societies. Ethnography presents the results of a holism research method founded on the idea that a system's properties cannot necessarily be accurately understood independently of each other....
 fieldwork in Chicago
Chicago

Chicago is the largest city in the U.S. state of Illinois and the Midwestern United States, as well as the List of United States cities by population city in the United States with more than 2.8 million residents....
, now applied elsewhere. While involving scholars at several Chicago area universities, the term is often used interchangeably to refer to the University of Chicago
University of Chicago

The University of Chicago is a private university located principally in the Hyde Park, Chicago neighborhood of Chicago. Although an older university by the same name existed prior to its founding, the modern University of Chicago credits its founding to the oil magnate John D....
's sociology department—one of the oldest and one of the most prestigious. Following World War II
World War II

World War II, or the Second World War , was a global military conflict which involved a Participants in World War II, including all of the great powers, organised into two opposing military alliances: the Allies of World War II and the Axis powers....
, a "Second Chicago School" arose whose members used symbolic interactionism
Symbolic interactionism

Symbolic interactionism is a major sociology perspective that is influential in many areas of the discipline. It is particularly important in microsociology and social psychology....
 combined with methods of field research, to create a new body of works. This was one of the first institutions to use quantitative methods in criminology
Quantitative methods in criminology

Since the inception of the discipline, quantitative methods have provided the primary research methods for studying the distribution and causes of crime....
.

The major researchers in the first Chicago School included Nels Anderson
Nels Anderson

Nels Anderson was an early United States Sociology. He studied at the University of Chicago under Robert E. Park and Ernest Burgess, whose concentric zone theory was one of the earliest models developed to explain the organization of urban areas....
, Ernest Burgess
Ernest Burgess

Ernest Watson Burgess was an Urban sociology at the University of Chicago. Burgess was born in Tilbury, Ontario, and educated at Kingfisher College in Oklahoma....
, Ruth Shonle Cavan, Edward Franklin Frazier, Everett Hughes
Everett Hughes

Everett Cherrington Hughes was an American sociologist best known for his work on ethnic relations, work and occupations and the methodology of fieldwork....
, Roderick D. McKenzie, George Herbert Mead
George Herbert Mead

George Herbert Mead was an United States philosopher, sociologist and psychologist, primarily affiliated with the University of Chicago, where he was one of several distinguished pragmatisms....
, Robert E. Park
Robert E. Park

Robert Ezra Park was an United States urban sociology, one of the main founders of the original Chicago school ....
, Walter C. Reckless, Edwin Sutherland
Edwin Sutherland

Edwin H. Sutherland was an United States sociologist. He is considered as one of the most influential criminologists of the twentieth century. He was a sociologist of the Symbolic interactionism school of thought and is best known for defining differential association which is a general theory of crime and delinquency that explains how devi...
, W. I. Thomas
W. I. Thomas

William Isaac Thomas , was an USA sociology. He is noted for his pioneering work on the sociology of migration on which he co-operated with Florian Znaniecki, and for his formulation of what became known as the Thomas theorem, a fundamental law of sociology: "If men define situations as real, they are real in their consequences"....
 , Frederic Thrasher
Frederic Thrasher

Frederic Milton Thrasher was a sociologist at the University of Chicago. He was a colleague of Robert E. Park and was one of the most prominent members of the Chicago School of Sociology in the 1920s....
, Louis Wirth
Louis Wirth

Louis Wirth was an United States sociologist and member of the Chicago school of sociology....
, Florian Znaniecki
Florian Znaniecki

Florian Witold Znaniecki was a philosopher and a sociologist. He taught and wrote in Poland and the United States. He was the 44th President of the American Sociological Association and the founder of academic sociology studies in Poland....
.

Discussion

The Chicago School is best known for its urban sociology and for the development of the symbolic interactionist approach. It has focused on human behaviour as determined by social structures and physical environmental factors, rather than genetic and personal characteristics. Biologist
Biologist

A biologist is a scientist devoted to and producing results in biology through the study of life.Typically biologists study organisms and their relationship to their environment....
s and anthropologists have accepted the theory of evolution as demonstrating that animals adapt to their environments. As applied to humans who are considered responsible for their own destinies, the School believed that the natural environment which the community
Community

In biological terms, a community is a group of interacting organisms sharing an environment .In human communities, intention, belief, Natural resource, preferences, Need assessment, risks, and a number of other conditions may be present and common, affecting the Identity of the participants and their degree of cohesiveness....
 inhabits is a major factor in shaping human behaviour, and that the city functions as a microcosm:

"In these great cities, where all the passions, all the energies of mankind are released, we are in a position to investigate the process of civilization
Civilization

A civilization is a society or culture group normally defined as a complex society characterized by the practice of agriculture and settlement in towns and city....
, as it were, under a microscope."


The work of Frederic E. Clements (1916) was particularly influential. He proposed that a community of vegetation is a superorganism and that communities develop in a fixed pattern of successional stages from inception through to some single climax state or to a self-regulating state of equilibrium. By analogy, an individual is born, grows, matures, and dies, but the community which the individual inhabited continues to grow and exhibit properties which are greater than the sum of the properties of the parts.

Members of the School have concentrated on the city of Chicago as the object of their study, seeking evidence whether urbanisation (Wirth: 1938) and increasing social mobility have been the causes of the contemporary social problems. Originally, Chicago was a clean slate, an empty physical environment. By 1860, Chicago was a small town with a population of 10,000. There was great growth after the fire of 1871. By 1910, the population exceeded two million. The rapidity of the increase was due to an influx of immigrants and it produced homelessness (Anderson: 1923), poor housing conditions, and bad working conditions based on low wages and long hours. But equally, Thomas and Znaniecki (1918) stress that the sudden freedom of immigrants released from the controls of Europe
Europe

Europe is, conventionally, one of the world's seven continents. Comprising the westernmost peninsula of Eurasia, Europe is generally divided from Asia to its east by the water divide of the Ural Mountains, the Ural , the Caspian Sea, and by the Caucasus Mountains to the southeast....
 to the unrestrained competition of the new city was a dynamic for growth.

"Ecological studies consisted of making spot maps of Chicago for the place of occurrence of specific behaviors, including alcoholism
Alcoholism

Alcoholism is a term with multiple and sometimes conflicting definitions to describe the detrimental effects of alcohol intake.In common and historic usage, alcoholism refers to any condition that results in the continued consumption of alcoholic beverages despite health problems and negative social consequences....
, homicide
Homicide

Homicide refers to the act of killing another human being. It can also describe a person who has committed such an act, though this use is rare in modern English....
s, suicide
Suicide

Suicide is the intentional taking of one's own life. Many dictionaries also note the metaphorical sense of "willful destruction of one's self-interest"....
s, psychoses, and poverty
Poverty

Poverty is the shortage of common things such as food, clothing, shelter and safe drinking water, all of which determine our quality of life. It may also include the lack of access to opportunities such as education and employment which aid the escape from poverty and/or allow one to enjoy the respect of fellow citizens....
, and then computing rates based on census data. A visual comparison of the maps could identify the concentration of certain types of behavior in some areas. Correlations of rates by areas were not made until later."


For Thomas, the groups themselves had to reinscribe and reconstruct themselves to prosper. Burgess studied the history of development and concluded that the city had not grown at the edges. Although the presence of Lake Michigan
Lake Michigan

Lake Michigan is one of the five Great Lakes of North America, and the only one located entirely within the United States. The third-largest of the Great Lakes, it is bounded, from west to east, by the U.S....
 prevented the complete encirclement, he postulated that all major cities would be formed by radial expansion from the centre in concentric rings
Concentric zone model

The Concentric ring model also known as the Burgess model is one of the earliest theoretical models to explain urban social structures. It was created by sociologist Ernest Burgess in 1925....
 which he described as zones, i.e. the business area in the centre, the slum
Slum

A slum, as defined by the United Nations agency UN-HABITAT, is a run-down area of a city characterized by substandard housing and squalor and lacking in tenure security....
 area (called the zone in transition and studied by Wirth: 1928, Zorbaugh: 1929, and Suttles: 1968) around the central area, the zone of workingmen's homes farther out, the residential area beyond this zone, and then the bungalow
Bungalow

A bungalow is a type of single-story house that originated in India. The word derives from the Gujarati word ba?glo, which in turn came from Hindustani ba?gla....
 section and the commuter's zone on the periphery. Under the influence of Albion Small, the research at the School mined the mass of official data including census reports, housing/welfare records and crime
Crime

Societies define Crime as the breach of one or more rules or laws for which some Government or force may ultimately prescribe a punishment.The word crime originates from the Latin crimen , from the Latin root cerno and Greek ????? = "I judge"....
 figures, and related the data spatially to different geographical areas of the city. Shaw and McKay created maps:
  • spot maps to demonstrate the location of a range of social problems with a primary focus on juvenile delinquency;
  • rate maps which divided the city into block of one square mile and showed the population by age, gender
    Gender

    Gender comprises a range of differences between man and woman, extending from the biological to the social. Biologically, the male gender is defined by the presence of a Y-chromosome, and its absence in the female gender....
    , ethnicity, etc.;
  • zone maps which demonstrated that the major problems were clustered in the city centre.
Thomas also developed techniques of self-reporting life histories to provide subjective balance to the analysis. Park, Burgess, and McKenzie are credited with institutionalising, if not establishing, sociology as a science. They are also criticised for their overly empiricist and idealised approach to the study of society but, in the inter-war years, their attitudes and prejudices were normative. Three broad themes characterised this dynamic period of Chicago studies:
  1. culture contact and conflict. This arises from Thomas and Znaniecki (1918) and studies how ethnic groups interact and compete in a process of community succession and institutional transformation (Hughes and Hughes: 1952). An important part of this work concerned African Americans; works including E. Franklin Frazier (1932) and Drake and Cayton (1945) shaped white America's perception of black communities for decades.
  2. succession in community institutions as stakeholders and actors in the ebb and flow of ethnic groups. Cressey (1932) studied the dance hall and commercialised entertainment services, Kincheloe (1938) studied church succession, Janowitz (1952) studied the community press, and Hughes (1979) studied the real-estate board.
  3. city politics. Merriam's commitment to practical reform politics was matched by Gosnell who researched voting and other forms of participation. Gosnell (1935), Wilson (1960), Grimshaw (1992) considered African American politics, and Banfield and Wilson (1963) placed Chicago city politics in a broader context.


The School is perhaps best known for the Subculture Theories of Thrasher, Frazier, and Sutherland, and for applying the principles of ecology
Ecology

Ecology is the science study of the distribution and Abundance of life and the interactions between organisms and their nature environment ....
 to develop the Social Disorganisation Theory which refers to consequences of the failure of:
  • social institutions or social organisations including the family
    Family

    Family denotes a group of people affiliated by a common ancestry, affinity or co-residence. Although the concept of consanguinity originally referred to relations by "blood," some cultural anthropology have argued that one must understand the idea of "blood" metaphorically, and that many societies understand 'family' through other concepts r...
    , school
    School

    File:Primary Student of Pakistan.JPGA school , is an institution designed to allow and encourage students to education, under the supervision of teachers....
    s, church, political institutions, policing, business, etc. in identified communities and/or neighbourhoods, or in society at large; and
  • social relationships that traditionally encourage co-operation between people.
Thomas defined social disorganisation as "the inability of a neighbourhood to solve its problems together" which suggested a level of social pathology and personal disorganisation, so the term, "differential social organisation" was preferred by many, and may have been the source of Sutherland's (1947) Differential Association Theory
Differential association

In criminology, Differential Association is a theory developed by Edwin Sutherland proposing that through interaction with others, individuals learn the values, attitudes, techniques, and motives for criminal behavior....
. The researchers have provided a clear analysis that the city is a place where life is superficial, where people are anonymous, where relationships are transitory and friendship and family bonds are weak. They have observed the weakening of primary social relationships and relate this to a process of social disorganisation (comparison with the concept of anomie
Anomie

Anomie, in contemporary English language is a sociology term that signifies in individuals an erosion, diminution or absence of personal norms, standards or values, and increased states of psychological normlessness....
 and the Strain Theories
Strain theory (sociology)

In criminology, the strain theory states that social structures within society may encourage citizens to commit crime. Following on the work of ?mile Durkheim, Strain Theories have been advanced by Robert King Merton , Albert K....
 is instructive).
For a complete discussion, see Social Disorganisation Theory
Social disorganisation theory

In sociology, the Social Disorganization Theory was one of the most important theories developed by the Chicago school , related to ecological theories....
 and Subcultural Theory
Subcultural theory

In criminology, subcultural theory emerged from the work of the Chicago school on gangs and developed through the Symbolic interactionism into a set of theories arguing that certain groups or subcultures in society have values and attitudes that are conducive to crime and violence....
.


Ecology and social theories

Vasishth and Sloane (2000) argue that while it is tempting to draw analogies between organisms in nature and the human condition, the problem lies in reductionism
Reductionism

Reductionism can either mean an approach to understanding the nature of complex things by reducing them to the interactions of their parts, or to simpler or more fundamental things or a philosophical position that a complex system is nothing but the sum of its parts, and that an account of it can be reduced to accounts of individual consti...
, i.e. that the science of biology is oversimplified into rules that are then applied mechanically to explain the growth and dynamics of human communities. The most fundamental difficulties are definitional. If a community is a group of individuals who inhabit the same place, is the community merely the sum of individuals and their activities, or is it something more that an aggregation of individuals? This is critical in planning research into group interactions. Will research be effective if it focuses on the individuals comprising a group, or is the community itself a proper subject of research independently of the individuals who comprise it? If the former, then data on individuals will explain the community, but if the community either directly or indirectly affects the behaviour of its members, then research must consider the patterns and processes of community as distinct from patterns and processes in populations of individuals. But this requires a definition and distinction between "pattern" and "process". The structures, forms, and patterns are relatively easy to observe and measure, but they are nothing more than evidence of underlying processes and functions which are the real constitutive forces in nature and society. The Chicago School wanted to develop tools by which to research and then change society by directing urban planning and social intervention agencies. It recognised that urban expansion was not haphazard but quite strongly controlled by community-level forces such as land values, zoning ordinances, landscape features, circulation corridors, and historical contingency. This was characterised as ecological because the external factors were neither chance nor intended, but rather arose from the natural forces in the environment which limit the adaptive spatial and temporal relationships between individuals. The School sought to derive patterns from a study of processes, rather than to ascribe processes to observed patterns and the patterns they saw emerge, are strongly reminiscent of Clements' ideas of community development.

Conclusions

The Chicago Area Project (CAP) was a practical attempt by sociologists to apply their theories in a city laboratory. Subsequent research showed that the youth athletic leagues, recreation programs, and summer camp worked best along with urban planning and alternatives to incarceration as crime control policy. Such programs are non-entrepreneurial and non-self-sustaining, and they fail when local or central government does not make a sustained financial commitment to them. Although with hindsight, the School's attempts to map crime may have produced some distortions, the work was valuable in that it moved away from a study of pattern and place toward a study of function and scale. To that extent, this was work of high quality that represented the best science available to the researchers at the time.

The Social Disorganisation Theory itself was a landmark and, since it focuses on the absence or breakdown of social control mechanisms, there are obvious links with social control theory
Social control theory

In criminology, Social Control Theory as represented in the work of Travis Hirschi fits into the Positivist school, Neo-classical school, and, later, Right Realism....
. In Causes of Delinquency (1969) Travis Hirschi argued that variations in delinquent behaviour among youth could be explained by variations in the dimensions of the social bond, namely attachment to others, commitments to conventional goals, acceptance of conventional moral
Moral

A moral is a message conveyed or a lesson to be learned from a story or event. The moral may be left to the hearer, reader or viewer to determine for themselves, or may be explicitly encapsulated in a maxim....
 standards or belief
Belief

Belief is the psychological state in which an individual holds a proposition or premise to be true....
s, and involvement in conventional activities. The greater the social bonds between a youth and society, the lower the odds of involvement in delinquency. When social bonds to conventional role models, values and institutions are aggregated for youth in a particular setting, they measure much the same phenomena as captured by concepts such as network ties or social integration. But the fact that these theories focus on the absence of control or the barriers to progress, means that they are ignoring the societal pressures and cultural values that drive the system Merton
Robert K. Merton

Robert King Merton was a distinguished American sociologist perhaps best known for having coined the phrase "self-fulfilling prophecy." He also coined many other phrases that have gone into everyday use, such as "role model" and "unintended consequences"....
 identified in the Strain Theory or the motivational forces Cohen proposed were generating crime and delinquency. More modern theorists like Empey (1967) argue that the system of values, norms and beliefs can be disorganised in the sense that there are conflicts among values, norms and beliefs within a widely shared, dominant culture. While condemning crime in general, law-abiding citizens may nevertheless respect and admire the criminal who takes risks and successfully engages in exciting, dangerous activities. The depiction of a society as a collection of socially differentiated groups with distinct subcultural perspectives that lead some of these groups into conflict with the law is another form of cultural disorganisation, is typically called cultural conflict.

Modern versions of the theory sometimes use different terminology to refer to the same ecological causal processes. For example, Crutchfield, Geerken and Gove (1982: 467-482) hypothesise that the social integration of communities is inhibited by population turnover and report supporting evidence in the explanation of variation in crime rates among cities. The greater the mobility of the population in a city, the higher the crime rates. These arguments are identical to those proposed by social disorganisation theorists and the evidence in support of it is as indirect as the evidence cited by social disorganisation theorists. But, by referring to social integration rather than disintegration, this research has not generated the same degree of criticism as social disorganisation theory.

External links

  • For an overview of the history of the Chicago School, see the web version of an article by Howard S. Becker, himself a member of the "Second Chicago School".




Other references

  • Abbot, Andrew. (1999). Department and Discipline: Chicago Sociology at One Hundred. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0-226-00099-0
  • Anderson, Nels, and Council of Social Agencies of Chicago. (1923). The Hobo: The Sociology of the Homeless Man.
  • Banfield, Edward C. & Wilson, James Q. (1963). City Politics.
  • Bulmer, Martin. (1984). The Chicago School of Sociology: Institutionalization, Diversity, and the Rise of Sociological Research. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • Burgess, Ernest & Bogue, Donald J. (eds.).(1964). Contributions to Urban Sociology. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0-226-08055-2
  • Burgess, Ernest & Bogue, Donald J. (eds.) (1967). Urban Sociology. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0-226-08056-0
  • Bursik, Robert J. (1984). "Urban Dynamics and Ecological Studies of Delinquency". Social Forces 63: 393-413.
  • Clements, Frederic E. (1916). Plant Succession: An Analysis of the Development of Vegetation. Carnegie Institute of Washington Publication, No. 242. Washington, DC: Carnegie Institution.
  • Crutchfield, R.D., M. Geerken and W.R. Gove, (1982). "Crime Rates and Social Integration: The Impact of Metropolitan Mobility" Criminology, Vol. 20, Nos. 3 and 4, November, 1982, 467-478
  • Cressey, Paul Goalby. (1932). The Taxi-Dance Hall: A Sociological Study in Commercialized Recreation and City Life.
  • Drake, St. Clair & Cayton, Horace. (1945). Black Metropolis: A Study of Negro Life in a Northern City.
  • Empey L. T. (1967) "Delinquency Theory and Recent Research". Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency 4.
  • Frazier, Edward Franklin. (1932). The Free Negro Family: A Study of Family Origins before the Civil War.
  • Frazier, Edward Franklin. (1932). The Negro Family in Chicago.
  • Gosnell, Harold Foote. (1927). Getting Out the Vote: An Experiment in the Stimulation of Voting.
  • Gosnell, Harold Foote. (1935). Negro Politicians: The Rise of Negro Politics in Chicago.
  • Gosnell, Harold Foote. (1937). Machine Politics: Chicago Model.
  • Grimshaw, William J. (1992). Bitter Fruit: Black Politics and the Chicago Machine, 1931–1991.
  • Hawley, Amos H. (1943). "Ecology and Human Ecology". Social Forces 22: 398-405.
  • Hawley, Amos H. (1950). Human Ecology: A Theory of Community Structure. New York: Ronald Press.
  • Hirschi, T. (1969). Causes of Delinquency. Berkeley: University of California Press. (2001) Transaction Publishers. ISBN 0-7658-0900-1
  • Hughes, Everett Cherrington. (1979). The Chicago Real Estate Board: The Growth of an Institution.
  • Hughes, Everett Cherrington & Hughes, Helen MacGill. (1952). Where Peoples Meet: Racial and Ethnic Frontiers.
  • Janowitz, Morris. (1952). The Community Press in an Urban Setting.
  • Kincheloe, Samuel C. (1938). The American City and Its Church.
  • Kurtz, Lester R. (1984). Evaluating Chicago Sociology: A Guide to the Literature, with an Annotated Bibliography. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0-226-46477-6
  • McKenzie, R. D. "The Ecological Approach to the Study of the Human Community". American Journal of Sociology 30 (1924): 287-301.
  • Merriam, Charles Edward. (1903). A History of American Political Theories.
  • Merriam, Charles Edward. (1908). Primary Elections: A Study of the History and Tendencies of Primary Election Legislation.
  • Merriam, Charles Edward. (1929). Chicago: A More Intimate View of Urban Politics.
  • Park, Robert E. (1915). "The City: Suggestions for the Investigation of Behavior in the City Environment", American Journal of Sociology 20:579-83.
  • Park, Robert E., Ernest Burgess, Roderic McKenzie (1925). The City, University of Chicago Press.
  • Stark et al., "Beyond Durkheim" Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 22(1983):120-131
  • Sutherland, Edwin. (1924, 34. 39). "Principles of Criminology.
  • Suttles, Gerald D. (1968) The Social Order of the Slum: Ethnicity and Territory in the Inner City.
  • Thomas, William Isaac & Znaniecki, Florian. (1918). The Polish Peasant in Europe and America: Monograph of an Immigrant Group.
  • Thrasher, Frederick (1927) The Gang. University of Chicago Press.
  • Vasishth, Ashwani & Sloane, David. (2000) Returning to Ecology: An Ecosystem Approach.
  • Wilson, James Q. (1960). Negro Politics: The Search for Leadership.
  • Wirth, Louis (1928) The Ghetto. University of Chicago Press.
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  • Zorbaugh, Harvey Warren. (1929). Gold Coast and Slum: A Sociological Study of Chicago's Near North Side.