“…The relationship between neighborhood poverty or socioeconomic status and mental health is well‐established (Kessler et al., ; Leventhal & Brooks‐Gunn, ; Leventhal, Dupere, & Brooks‐Gunn, ; Sampson, Morenoff, & Gannon‐Rowley, ). Research suggests that specific aspects of the neighborhood environment, such as physical and social disorder, low collective efficacy, and exposure to violence, may have a negative effect on adolescent mental health and increase engagement in risky behaviors (Aneshensel & Sucoff, ; Gorman‐Smith, Tolan, & Henry, ; Lang et al., ; Nebbitt, Lombe, Sanders‐Phillips, & Stokes, ; Overstreet, ; Voisin, Jenkins, & Takahashi, ). Protective aspects of neighborhoods are also important, including neighborhood support and collective efficacy, which are associated with lower levels of individual adolescent problem behaviors, including conduct problems, substance use, and risky sexual behavior (Brody et al., ; Widome, Sieving, Harpin, & Hearst, ).…”