Ex-offenders and the conformist alternative: A job quality model of work and crime

被引:119
|
作者
Uggen, C [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Minnesota, Dept Sociol, Minneapolis, MN 55455 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1525/sp.1999.46.1.03x0245k
中图分类号
C91 [社会学];
学科分类号
030301 ; 1204 ;
摘要
Criminologists from diverse theoretical perspectives have long asserted that the quality of employment is more strongly associated with criminal behavior than its presence or absence. By this argument, "good jobs" or "meaningful work" are necessary to induce offenders to desist from crime. This paper constructs a satisfaction based measure of job quality using data from the National Supported Work Demonstration and the 1977 Quality of Employment Survey and tests whether employment in high quality jobs reduces the likelihood of criminal behavior among offenders. After statistical corrections for selection into employment, job quality is found to reduce the likelihood of economic and non-economic criminal behavior among a sample of released high-risk offenders. None of the most salient alternative explanations-sample selection, human capital accumulation, personal expectations, external labor market effects, or prior criminality-appear to diminish the job quality effect.
引用
收藏
页码:127 / 151
页数:25
相关论文
共 32 条
  • [1] ALTERNATIVE MODEL OF COMMUNITY SERVICES FOR EX-OFFENDERS AND THEIR FAMILIES
    STERLING, JW
    HARTY, RW
    [J]. FEDERAL PROBATION, 1972, 36 (03) : 31 - 34
  • [2] Evaluating Alternative Aftercare Models for Ex-Offenders
    Jason, Leonard A.
    Olson, Bradley D.
    Harvey, Ronald
    [J]. JOURNAL OF DRUG ISSUES, 2015, 45 (01) : 53 - 68
  • [3] Violent Crime in the Lives of Homeless Female Ex-Offenders
    Nyamathi, Adeline M.
    Salem, Benissa E.
    Hall, Elizabeth
    Oleskowicz, Tanya
    Ekstrand, Maria
    Yadav, Kartik
    Toyama, Joy
    Turner, Susan
    Faucette, Mark
    [J]. ISSUES IN MENTAL HEALTH NURSING, 2017, 38 (02) : 122 - 131
  • [4] Crime, Search, and Ex-offenders' Accessibility to Labor Markets
    Otsu, Yuki
    [J]. LABOUR-ENGLAND, 2016, 30 (04): : 393 - 414
  • [5] Hiring ex-offenders: A theoretical model
    Young, Nicole C. Jones
    Powell, Gary N.
    [J]. HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT REVIEW, 2015, 25 (03) : 298 - 312
  • [6] DIFFERENTIAL INTEGRATION AND JOB RETENTION AMONG EX-OFFENDERS
    KNOX, GW
    [J]. CRIMINOLOGY, 1981, 18 (04) : 481 - 499
  • [7] CRIME AND POVERTY - SOME EXPERIMENTAL-EVIDENCE FROM EX-OFFENDERS
    BERK, RA
    LENIHAN, KJ
    ROSSI, PH
    [J]. AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW, 1980, 45 (05) : 766 - 786
  • [8] Job Search, Conditional Treatment and Recidivism: The Employment Services for Ex-Offenders Program Reconsidered
    Bierens, Herman J.
    Carvalho, Jose R.
    [J]. B E JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC ANALYSIS & POLICY, 2011, 11 (01):
  • [9] Beyond banning the box: A conceptual model of the stigmatization of ex-offenders in the workplace
    Baur, John E.
    Hall, Alison V.
    Daniels, Shanna R.
    Buckley, M. Ronald
    Anderson, Heather J.
    [J]. HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT REVIEW, 2018, 28 (02) : 204 - 219
  • [10] Ex-offenders and the labour market: a review of the discourse of social exclusion and consequences for crime and the New Deal
    Fletcher, DR
    [J]. ENVIRONMENT AND PLANNING C-GOVERNMENT AND POLICY, 1999, 17 (04): : 431 - 444