Department of Sociology, University of Massachusetts Boston, Boston, MA, USA,
J Youth Adolesc. 2014 Nov;43(11):1914-33. doi: 10.1007/s10964-013-0045-z. Epub 2013 Oct 23.
Research on immigration and crime has only recently started to consider potential heterogeneity in longitudinal patterns of immigrant offending. Guided by segmented assimilation and life course criminology frameworks, this article advances prior research on the immigration-crime nexus in three ways: using a large sample of high-risk adjudicated youth containing first and second generation immigrants; examining longitudinal trajectories of official and self-reported offending; and merging segmented assimilation and life course theories to distinguish between offending patterns. Data come from the Pathways to Desistance study containing detailed offending and socio-demographic background information on 1,354 adolescents (13.6 % female; n = 1,061 native-born; n = 210 second generation immigrants; n = 83 first generation immigrants) as they transition to young adulthood (aged 14-17 at baseline). Over 84 months we observe whether patterns of offending, and the correlates that may distinguish them, operate differently across immigrant generations. Collectively, this study offers the first investigation of whether immigrants, conditioned on being adjudicated, are characterized by persistent offending. Results show that first generation immigrants are less likely to be involved in serious offending and to evidence persistence in offending, and appear to be on a path toward desistance much more quickly than their peers. Further, assimilation and neighborhood disadvantage operate in unique ways across generational status and relate to different offending styles. The findings show that the risk for persistent offending is greatest among those with high levels of assimilation who reside in disadvantaged contexts, particularly among the second generation youth in the sample.
移民与犯罪研究最近才开始关注移民犯罪的纵向模式中潜在的异质性。本文以分段同化和生命历程犯罪学框架为指导,从三个方面推进了移民犯罪关系的先前研究:使用包含第一代和第二代移民的高风险被判决青年的大样本;检验官方和自我报告犯罪的纵向轨迹;以及融合分段同化和生命历程理论,以区分犯罪模式。数据来自“脱离犯罪途径研究”,该研究包含了 1354 名青少年(13.6%为女性;n=1061 名本地出生;n=210 名第二代移民;n=83 名第一代移民)在向成年早期过渡(基线时年龄为 14-17 岁)期间的详细犯罪和社会人口背景信息。在 84 多个月的时间里,我们观察犯罪模式以及可能区分它们的相关因素是否在不同的移民代际之间存在差异。总的来说,这项研究首次调查了被判决的移民是否具有持续犯罪的特征。结果表明,第一代移民不太可能参与严重犯罪,也不太可能表现出持续犯罪的倾向,而且似乎比同龄人更快地走上了摆脱犯罪的道路。此外,同化和邻里劣势在代际地位上以独特的方式发挥作用,并与不同的犯罪方式有关。研究结果表明,在那些同化程度高且居住在不利环境中的人中,持续犯罪的风险最大,尤其是在样本中的第二代青年中。