Neighborhood watch programs are fading in the age of Ring and Nextdoor

Axios Axios

America's classic neighborhood watch programs are fading ashttps://www.axios.com/2026/04/24/catholics-pope-vatican-artificial-intelligence" target="_blank"> AI-powered apps turn neighborhoods into digital watch zones.

Why it matters: The automation of neighborhood safety with tools likehttps://www.axios.com/2026/02/17/doorbell-cams-and-surveillance-tech-face-growing-public-backlash" target="_blank"> Amazon's Ring and the Nextdoor app is quietly dismantling one of the country's most basic forms of civic life: neighbors who actually know each other.


  • What's replacing it is faster, smarter — and far more detached.
  • Shared videos of "suspicious" strangers and wildlife alerts are in; out are block captains, porch meetings and "See Something, Say Something" signs.

Zoom in: Ring doorbells stream constant footage, allowing users to post it all on an app as alerts.

Meanwhile, as surveillance technology spreads, neighborhood watch programs are being dismantled.

What they're saying: Scant data exists on the programs' demise, but National Sheriffs' Association executive director Justin Smith tells Axios the drop is real, as neighbors switch from actively watching out for each other to watching screens.

  • "We actually lose communication, and we lose that sense of community," Mary Dodge, professor of criminal justice at the University of Colorado Denver School of Public Affairs, tells Axios.
  • Neighborhood watch once depended on what researchers call "collective efficacy" — people knowing each other well enough to act together.

    Now, Dodge said, people don't need to know their neighbors at all.

Zoom out: The decline of the neighborhood watch comes as Americans spend more time at home, even as they become strangers to their neighbors.

Flashback: Neighborhood watch programs emerged in the late 1960s as part of a push toward community policing — the idea that crime prevention depends on residents working with police.

  • The National Sheriffs' Association formalized the program in 1972, and it spread nationwide as a low-cost way to deter crime.

Yes, but: The new system is better at catching crime — and worse at building trust.

  • Smith said law enforcement can gather all the data collected by apps and analyze it by using https://www.axios.com/2026/01/24/ai-police-evidence-cold-cases" target="_blank">AI to crack cases that used to take months, if not years, to solve.
  • At the same time, law enforcement is losing its human intelligence on the ground.

Friction point: The old neighborhood watch had its own problems, like racial profiling and suspicion of outsiders.

The new version hasn't solved that, and may have scaled it.

The bottom line: In the past, solving a neighborhood crime meant talking to the person on the porch.

Now it means pulling footage, scanning data — and letting AI connect the dots.

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