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Cash, crime, and cryptocurrencies
In: The quarterly review of economics and finance, Band 85, S. 200-207
ISSN: 1062-9769
SSRN
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Crime and Durable Goods
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Working paper
Deportation, Crime, and Victimization
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Working paper
Social Disadvantage and Crime
In: American behavioral scientist: ABS, Band 60, Heft 10, S. 1232-1259
ISSN: 0002-7642
Crime, Inequality, and Unemployment
In: American economic review, Band 93, Heft 5, S. 1764-1777
ISSN: 1944-7981
WOMEN, RACE, AND CRIME *
In: Criminology: the official publication of the American Society of Criminology, Band 28, Heft 4, S. 601-626
ISSN: 1745-9125
This paper explores the capacity of alternative theoretical perspectives to explain the self‐reported criminality of black and white young adult females. When criminal involvement is regressed on the theory operation‐alizations separately by race, a key difference emerges: For white women, significant effects are clustered in the social‐psychological theory groups (bonding, attitudes, and maturation), but for the black women the social‐psychological variables have only scattered and inconsistent eflects. Instead, for black women structural indicators emerge as the important predictors of criminal involvement.
Newspapers and Crime in Detroit
In: Journalism quarterly, Band 47, Heft 2, S. 233-308
This study, which examines crime rate change in Detroit during two newspaper strikes, found that non-expressive crimes decreased significantly during the absence of daily newspapers.
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Working paper
Recent Historical Studies of Crime and Crime Control in the United States
In: IASSIST quarterly: IQ, Band 3, Heft 4, S. 14
ISSN: 2331-4141
Recent Historical Studies of Crime and Crime Control in the United States
Immigration and crime: do Asian immigrants bring more crimes to Australia?
The link between the increased Asian immigration to Australia and crime rates has been subjected to debates in Australian contemporary society. With the concern of Australia being overwhelmed by Asians, some politicians, scholars and the public strongly oppose the increase in Asian immigrants. Most of anti-Asian debates are however based on rather subjective claims that Asian immigrants bring more crimes and social disorders to Australia, and these claims have not been supported by any convincing empirical research. Applying multivariate regression analysis, this paper statistically examines the relationship between Asian population, Asian immigrants and crime rates in six states and two territories of Australia from 1981 to 2004. After controlling for the relevant factors such as the population size, state-specific fixed effects, and a measure of urbanisation, the results are mixed. On the one hand, an increase in Asian immigrants has no effect on crime against persons and crime against properties. On the other hand, an increase in the size of Asian population has a statistically significant effect on crime against persons.
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RACIAL ANIMOSITY AND INTERRACIAL CRIME*
In: Criminology: the official publication of the American Society of Criminology, Band 47, Heft 1, S. 269-296
ISSN: 1745-9125
The primary objective of this study is to determine the effect of a victim's race on the likelihood of him or her being seriously injured during the commission of an interracial crime. We also assess the probability of a homicide occurring during an interracial crime. A multilevel city analysis shows that black offenders are no more apt than white offenders to injure their victims seriously during an interracial robbery or rape. A black offender also does not have a greater proclivity to kill his or her victim during the commission of an interracial crime. Some evidence suggests that white victims are more likely than black victims to suffer serious physical harm during an aggravated assault. Results also reveal that contextual factors related to racial animosity, such as residential segregation, white‐to‐black economic inequality, and black‐to‐white unemployment, fail to have any moderating effect on either the severity of victim injury or the likelihood of a homicide occurring during an interracial crime. Overall, the results generated in this study tend to cast doubt on the validity of racial animosity theory. Our findings also lead us to question the veracity of the oftenmade claim that black‐on‐white crimes are punished more severely because these types of offenses are somehow more heinous in circumstance. At least in regard to serious victim injury and victim death, black‐on‐white crime is no more violent than white‐on‐black crime.
Blacks, Crime, and American Culture
In: The annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Band 423, Heft 1, S. 89-98
ISSN: 1552-3349
Attempts to understand crime patterns among blacks in the United States have systematically failed to consider the impact of slavery and resultant racist policies on black self-esteem. This paper explores the thesis that cultural domination was fundamentally more damaging than economic domination to black self-esteem. The ruth less attacks on blacks and black culture, usually justified by legal interpretations by whites, destroyed their faith that justice could be secured in this society. Data is pre sented which indicates that social inequalities have been perpetuated under the law and blacks were aware of this. Indeed, the law appears as a major instrument of racial oppression and, historically, many blacks have resisted oppression through illegal acts. Economic oppression of blacks under the law and their resistance created the condi tion in which the connection between crime and punishment lost the power to constrain antisocial acts. Blacks often secretly admired resistance, particularly those who felt op pressed, while whites developed extreme paranoia that blacks were out to take their lives and property. The euphemism "crime in the streets" is the perpetuation of this paranoia. The records show that blacks mainly victim ize blacks. Chances are far greater for a white to be victim ized by another white than by a black. The predominant crime pattern among blacks is against property, and the rate is not significantly higher than for whites. In crime against persons, black rates are higher than white rates.