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Unemployment and Crime Rates in the Post-World War II United States - A Theoretical and Empirical Analysis

NCJ Number
99361
Journal
American Sociological Review Volume: 50 Issue: 3 Dated: (June 1985) Pages: 317-332
Author(s)
D Cantor; K C Land
Date Published
1985
Length
16 pages
Annotation
Using annual time-series data for the United States, 1946-1982, two hypotheses are tested: (1) The level of the unemployment rate in any given year will have a negative partial contemporaneous effect on detrended fluctuations (increases or decreases) in seven Index Crime rates (homicide, rape, aggravated assault, robbery, burglary, larceny-theft, and motor vehicle theft) in that year. (2) Unemployment-rate fluctuations from one year to the next will have a positive partial effect on detrended crime-rate fluctuations in the next year.
Abstract
These hypotheses are developed from a theoretical model that identifies the former with a criminal opportunity effect, and the latter with a criminal motivation effect, of aggregate unemployment on crime. For burglary, robbery, and larceny-theft, empirical support is found for the expected pattern of partial effects. However, the relative sizes of the effects are such that the total impacts of unemployment -- through both partial effects -- are negative. In addition, only the negative-levels effect is exhibited for homicide and motor vehicle theft, while rape and aggravated assault show no consistent association with either levels or fluctuations in the unemployment rate. Interpretations for these findings are discussed. (Author abstract)