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Neighborhoods and Development: New Approaches for a Changing America

Neighborhoods and Development: New Approaches for a Changing America

Headshot of Dawn Witherspoon

PI: Dawn Witherspoon
Penn State

Headshot of Rebecca M. B. White

PI: Rebecca M. B. White
Arizona State University

NSF 1748374
Administered in: College of the Liberal Arts

Abstract:

This two-day workshop was supported by NSF and brought together a multidisciplinary group of scholars to improve understanding of how the places people live in influence their social, emotional, and cognitive development. Scientific evidence has documented how neighborhoods and other “activity spaces” – such as schools, workplaces, and social institutions – influence development. The aim of the workshop was to use the evidence to help build a comprehensive, place-based science. Broadly speaking, a place-based science of lifespan development recognizes that different residential neighborhoods and activity spaces might expose children, youth, and families to different resources and risks. These differences have important implications for development. In addition, there is a critical need to incorporate transdisciplinary perspectives on race, ethnicity, and culture to advance a place-based science that is relevant and meaningful for an increasingly diverse U.S. society. Therefore, with a cultural, contextual, and developmental lens, this workshop aimed to enhance the theoretical and conceptual frameworks that will support future place-based research on development across the lifespan. Such research can address important societal issues related to segregation, inequality, and positive development.

This workshop allowed a group of scholars to work together to (1) integrate existing theoretical foundations of neighborhood and activity space research and (2) critically analyze how these theoretical foundations can incorporate scientific evidence that has documented racial, ethnic, and cultural diversity in developmental processes across the lifespan. Additionally, workshop participants published two important publications that reviewed a decade of place-based scholarship (Journal of Research on Adolescence) and addressed long-term methodological challenges in neighborhood and activity space research as well as developed a set of recommendations on innovative, dynamic, multi-level approaches that reflect theoretical and conceptual advances made in the workshop (Monographs of Child Development).  

Ongoing work is utilizing the recommendations and principles shared in the Monograph to understand how place shapes development.