Pager Devah, Western Bruce, Sugie Naomi
an associate professor of sociology and a faculty associate of the Office of Population Research at Princeton University. Her research focuses on institutions affecting racial stratification, including education, labor markets, and the criminal justice system. Her recent book, Marked: Race, Crime, and Finding Work in an Era of Mass Incarceration (University of Chicago 2007), describes the results from a field experiment investigating the racial and economic consequences of large-scale imprisonment for contemporary U.S. labor markets.
Ann Am Acad Pol Soc Sci. 2009 May;623(1):195-213. doi: 10.1177/0002716208330793.
In this article, the authors report the results of a large-scale field experiment conducted in New York City investigating the effects of race and a prison record on employment. Teams of black and white men were matched and sent to apply for low-wage jobs throughout the city, presenting equivalent resumés and differing only in their race and criminal background. The authors find a significant negative effect of a criminal record on employment outcomes that appears substantially larger for African Americans. The sequence of interactions preceding hiring decisions suggests that black applicants are less often invited to interview, thereby providing fewer opportunities to establish rapport with the employer. Furthermore, employers' general reluctance to discuss the criminal record of an applicant appears especially harmful for black ex-offenders. Overall, these results point to the importance of rapport-building for finding work, something that the stigmatizing characteristics of minority and criminal status make more difficult to achieve.
在本文中,作者报告了在纽约市进行的一项大规模实地实验的结果,该实验调查了种族和犯罪记录对就业的影响。黑人和白人男性团队进行了匹配,并被派往全市各地申请低薪工作,他们提交的简历相当,只是种族和犯罪背景不同。作者发现,犯罪记录对就业结果有显著的负面影响,对非裔美国人的影响似乎更大。招聘决定之前的互动顺序表明,黑人求职者较少被邀请参加面试,从而获得与雇主建立融洽关系的机会也更少。此外,雇主普遍不愿讨论求职者的犯罪记录,这对有犯罪记录的黑人似乎尤其有害。总体而言,这些结果表明建立融洽关系对找工作很重要,而少数族裔身份和犯罪身份的污名化特征使这一点更难实现。