Hassett-Walker Connie, Walsemann Katrina, Bell Bethany, Fisk Calley, Shadden Mark, Zhou Weidan
Dept. of Criminal Justice, Kean University, 1000 Morris Avenue, Willis Hall 305, Union, NJ 07083.
Dept. of Health Promotion, Education & Behavior, University of South Carolina, Discovery I, 915 Greene Street, Room 529, Columbia, SC 29208.
J Dev Life Course Criminol. 2017 Jun;3(2):196-220. doi: 10.1007/s40865-017-0060-y. Epub 2017 Jun 5.
Much criminal justice research has ignored racial/ethnic and gender differences in substance use subsequent to criminal justice involvement. This paper investigated how early adulthood arrest (i.e., 18 to 21 years of age) influences individuals' subsequent transitions from non-substance use to substance use, and substance use to non-substance use through age 30. We also consider if these relationships differ by race/ethnicity and gender. Processes proscribed by labeling theory subsequent to getting arrested are considered.
We analyzed 15 waves of data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1997. Multinomial logistic regressions were performed using Stata software version 14.
We found racial/ethnic differences in the effect of arrest on subsequent substance use, particularly marijuana. Being arrested was associated with shifting non-binge drinkers and non-marijuana users into binge drinking and marijuana use; as well as shifting binge drinkers and marijuana users into non-use. This pattern was most evident among White and Black men. For Black men, the association between arrest and both becoming a binge drinker becoming a non-binge drinker was experienced most strongly during their early twenties. Women's patterns in substance use transitions following an arrest were less clear than for the men.
Some results, particularly transitioning into marijuana use, offer qualified support for processes proscribed through labeling theory. Findings that arrest shifts individuals into non-marijuana use suggest that factors not accounted for by labeling theory - arrest serving as a teachable moment for those using substances - may be at play.
许多刑事司法研究忽视了刑事司法介入后物质使用方面的种族/族裔和性别差异。本文研究了成年早期被捕(即18至21岁)如何影响个体随后从非物质使用到物质使用以及到30岁时从物质使用到非物质使用的转变。我们还考虑了这些关系是否因种族/族裔和性别而有所不同。研究了被捕后标签理论所规定的过程。
我们分析了来自1997年全国青年纵向调查的15波数据。使用Stata软件版本14进行多项逻辑回归。
我们发现被捕对随后物质使用的影响存在种族/族裔差异,尤其是对大麻的影响。被捕与将非狂饮者和非大麻使用者转变为狂饮者和大麻使用者以及将狂饮者和大麻使用者转变为非使用者有关。这种模式在白人和黑人男性中最为明显。对于黑人男性来说,被捕与成为狂饮者和成为非狂饮者之间的关联在他们二十出头时最为强烈。女性被捕后物质使用转变的模式不如男性清晰。
一些结果,特别是向使用大麻的转变,为标签理论所规定的过程提供了有限的支持。被捕使个体转变为不使用大麻的结果表明,标签理论未考虑到 的因素——被捕对那些使用物质的人来说是一个可从中吸取教训的时刻——可能在起作用。