This study examines how prior
neighborhood characteristics affect youth’s offending when youths move into an
incarceration context.
Neighborhood ethnic heterogeneity, residential stability,
and disadvantage are often predictive of neighborhood crime, but it is unclear
how these neighborhood constructs continue to affect youth’s behavior inside a
secure facility. In a sample of recently incarcerated juvenile offenders (N =
320), this study examined how prior neighborhood characteristics affect
institutional offending over the first 8 weeks of incarceration.
Although
disadvantage did not relate to institutional offending, results indicate that
youths from racially/ethnically homogenous communities are more likely to
offend during the initial weeks of incarceration, whereas youths from
residentially stable communities are more likely to offend in the latter weeks.
Purchase full article at: http://goo.gl/N8eLQ8
Adam Boessen, Department of Criminology, Law and Society,
University of California, 3331 Social Ecology II, Irvine, CA, 92697, USA.
Email: aboessen@uci.edu
More at: https://twitter.com/hiv
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