| Many evaluations of neighborhood-level interventions have relied on neighborhood
matching strategies, but to the authors knowledge the validity of
this methodology has not been tested. This paper responds to the demand
for rigorous evidence on the use of quasi-experimental neighborhood matches
for assessing the effectiveness of community-wide interventions. Using
neighborhood-level data in Cleveland, Ohio, and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,
to match potential target neighborhoods to virtual comparison neighborhoods,
this paper evaluates the number of target neighborhoods that can be matched
and how well they stay matched over time. It identifies a range of matching
variables and constraints that appear to strike the best balance between
matchability and match quality. The results compare favorably to those
generated by two less restrictive alternatives. The paper ends with suggestions
for replication in other sites, with other outcomes, and in other time
periods. It tentatively concludes that the neighborhood-matching algorithm
described in this analysis is both operationally feasible and offers respectable
accuracy in detecting the magnitude of impacts that might be expected
from neighborhood-based employment interventions.
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