We assess unequal responsiveness to citizen demands for municipal goods and services using a dataset of about 42 million 311 requests from 13 large cities between 2011 and 2019. We report three findings. First, we find no evidence that cities respond to requests from whiter and more affluent neighborhoods faster than they do the same type of request from less white and affluent neighborhoods, even after accounting for proxies of neighborhood need. On average, however, white, rich neighborhoods receive faster responses to their calls than non-white, poor neighborhoods. Additional analyses suggest that these disparities may not reflect deliberate bias on the part of cities in favor of the needs of whites and the rich, but rather that non-white and poor neighborhoods tend to ask for services that require more time and resources for the city to respond to. Our paper provides the most comprehensive and contemporary analysis to date of inequalities in U.S. city service delivery.
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6 July 2020
Research Article|
June 10 2024
Unequal Responsiveness in City Service Delivery: Evidence from 42 Million 311 Calls Available to Purchase
Brian T. Hamel;
Brian T. Hamel
Department of Political Science,
University of North Texas
, 1155 Union Circle #305340, Denton, TX 76203, USA
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Derek E. Holliday
Derek E. Holliday
Polarization Research Lab and Department of Political Science,
Stanford University
, 616 Jane Stanford Way, Encina Hall West, Room 100, Stanford, CA 94 305, USA
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*
We thank Justin de Benedictis-Kessner, Miriam Golden, Guy Grossman, John Holbein, Jan Leighley, Jeff Lewis, Aaron Rudkin, Tara Slough, Chris Tausanovitch, Lynn Vavreck, Jesse Yoder, as well as seminar and conference participants at Florida State University and MPSA 2019 for their comments and conversations. We also thank Sean Whyard for his assistance.
Online ISSN: 1554-0634
Print ISSN: 1554-0626
© 2024 B. T. Hamel and D. E. Holliday
2024
B. T. Hamel and D. E. Holliday
Licensed re-use rights only
Quarterly Journal of Political Science (2020) 15 (3): 243–274.
Citation
Hamel BT, Holliday DE (2020), "Unequal Responsiveness in City Service Delivery: Evidence from 42 Million 311 Calls". Quarterly Journal of Political Science, Vol. 15 No. 3 pp. 243–274, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/100.00022089
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