Pridemore William Alex, Chamlin Mitchell B, Cochran John K
William Alex Pridemore is Associate Professor of Criminal Justice at Indiana University, where he is also affiliated with the Russian and East European Institute. He is a member of the National Consortium on Violence Research. His main research interests include the impact of socioeconomic change and of heavy drinking on homicide and suicide in Russia. Recent publications include a book, Ruling Russia: Law, Crime, and Justice in a Changing Society as well as articles in Social Forces, Addiction, and Justice Quarterly . Mitchell B. Chamlin is Professor of Criminal Justice at the University of Cincinnati. He earned his PhD in Sociology (1985) from SUNY-Albany. His continuing research interests are in longitudinal tests of macro-social theories of crime and crime control and assessing issues surrounding the death penalty debate. Beginning in January 2007, he is Editor of the Journal of Crime and Justice . John K. Cochran is Professor and Associate Chair in the Department of Criminology at the University of South Florida. He earned his PhD in Sociology (1987) from the University of Florida. His scholarly interests include tests of both micro- and macro-social theories of criminal behavior and crime control and assessments of issues surrounding the death penalty debate.
Justice Q. 2007 Jun 1;24(2):271. doi: 10.1080/07418820701294813.
The dissolution of the Soviet Union resulted in sudden, widespread, and fundamental changes to Russian society. The former social welfare system-with its broad guarantees of employment, healthcare, education, and other forms of social support-was dismantled in the shift toward democracy, rule of law, and a free-market economy. This unique natural experiment provides a rare opportunity to examine the potentially disintegrative effects of rapid social change on deviance, and thus to evaluate one of Durkheim's core tenets. We took advantage of this opportunity by performing interrupted time-series analyses of annual age-adjusted homicide, suicide, and alcohol-related mortality rates for the Russian Federation using data from 1956 to 2002, with 1992-2002 as the postintervention time-frame. The ARIMA models indicate that, controlling for the long-term processes that generated these three time series, the breakup of the Soviet Union was associated with an appreciable increase in each of the cause-of-death rates. We interpret these findings as being consistent with the Durkheimian hypothesis that rapid social change disrupts social order, thereby increasing the level of crime and deviance.
苏联解体给俄罗斯社会带来了突然、广泛且根本性的变化。以前的社会福利体系——有着对就业、医疗、教育及其他形式社会支持的广泛保障——在向民主、法治和自由市场经济转变的过程中被瓦解。这一独特的自然实验提供了一个难得的机会,来检验快速社会变革对越轨行为可能产生的瓦解性影响,从而评估涂尔干的一个核心信条。我们利用这一机会,对1956年至2002年俄罗斯联邦按年龄调整的年度凶杀、自杀及与酒精相关的死亡率进行中断时间序列分析,将1992年至2002年作为干预后的时间框架。自回归整合移动平均模型表明,在控制了产生这三个时间序列的长期过程后,苏联解体与各死亡率的显著上升有关。我们将这些发现解释为与涂尔干的假设一致,即快速的社会变革会扰乱社会秩序,从而提高犯罪和越轨行为的水平。