Kirk David S
Department of Sociology, Nuffield College, University of Oxford, Oxford OX1 3UQ, United Kingdom
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2015 Jun 2;112(22):6943-8. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1501987112. Epub 2015 May 14.
More than 600,000 prisoners are released from incarceration each year in the United States, and most end up residing in metropolitan areas, clustered within a select few neighborhoods. Likely consequences of this concentration of returning prisoners include higher rates of subsequent crime and recidivism. In fact, one-half of released prisoners return to prison within only 3 y of release. The routine exposure to criminogenic influences and criminal opportunities portends a bleak future for individuals who reside in neighborhoods with numerous other ex-prisoners. Through a natural experiment focused on post-Hurricane Katrina Louisiana, I examine a counterfactual scenario: If instead of concentrating ex-prisoners in geographic space, what would happen to recidivism rates if ex-prisoners were dispersed across space? Findings reveal that a decrease in the concentration of parolees in a neighborhood leads to a significant decrease in the reincarceration rate of former prisoners.
在美国,每年有超过60万名囚犯获释,其中大多数最终居住在大都市地区,集中在少数几个社区内。回归囚犯如此集中可能产生的后果包括后续犯罪率和累犯率上升。事实上,一半的获释囚犯在获释后仅3年内就再次入狱。对于居住在有大量其他出狱者的社区中的个人来说,日常接触犯罪影响和犯罪机会预示着黯淡的未来。通过一项以卡特里娜飓风后的路易斯安那州为重点的自然实验,我研究了一个反事实情景:如果不是将出狱者集中在地理空间中,而是将他们分散在各地,累犯率会发生什么变化?研究结果表明,社区中假释人员集中度的降低会导致前囚犯再次入狱率的显著下降。