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Title: The Importance of Family Background and Neighborhood Effects as Determinants of Crime
Author(s): Karin Hederos Eriksson, Randi Hjalmarsson, Matthew Lindquist and Anna Sandberg
Publication Date: March 2014
Keyword(s): crime, family background, incarceration, neighborhood correlation, neighborhood effects and sibling correlation
Programme Area(s): Labour Economics and Public Economics
Abstract: We quantify the importance of family background and neighborhood effects as determinants of criminal convictions and incarceration by estimating sibling and neighborhood correlations. At the extensive margin, factors common to siblings account for 24 percent of the variation in criminal convictions and 39 percent of the variation in incarceration. At the intensive margin, these factors typically account for slightly less than half of the variation in prison sentence length and between one-third and one-half of the variation in criminal convictions, depending on crime type and gender. Neighborhood correlations, on the other hand, are quite small. We, therefore, conclude that these large sibling correlations are most likely generated by family influences and not by neighborhood influences. Further analysis shows that parental criminality and family structure contribute more to sibling similarities in crime than parental income and education or neighborhood characteristics. The lions? share of the sibling crime correlations, however, are unexplained by these factors. Finally, sibling spacing also matters ? more closely spaced siblings are more similar in their criminal behavior.
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Bibliographic Reference
Hederos Eriksson, K, Hjalmarsson, R, Lindquist, M and Sandberg, A. 2014. 'The Importance of Family Background and Neighborhood Effects as Determinants of Crime'. London, Centre for Economic Policy Research. https://cepr.org/active/publications/discussion_papers/dp.php?dpno=9911