Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement, PO Box 71304, 1008 BH, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Department of Criminology, VU University Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Arch Sex Behav. 2024 Aug;53(8):2923-2938. doi: 10.1007/s10508-024-02902-9. Epub 2024 Jun 21.
Sexual minority groups experience elevated risk across a range of adverse outcomes. Previous studies from the USA showed that these risks include contact with the criminal justice system for sexual minority females but not for males. This study examined whether this relationship between sexual minority status and criminal behavior was also found in a more secular country like the Netherlands with more progressive attitudes toward sexual minorities. Furthermore, the study aimed to examine whether this relationship applied to various types of crime and could be explained by unmeasured familial factors. Longitudinal data from the Dutch national population, including 75,362 individuals in a same-sex relationship and 3,464,906 individuals in opposite-sex relationships, were used to compare the risk of crime among males and females in same-sex and opposite-sex unions. Discordant sibling models were included to increase control over possible sources of confounding from shared familial factors. Analyses were repeated for six types of crime, including property offenses, violence, vandalism, and public order offenses, traffic offenses, drugs offenses, and other offenses. The results showed that the direction of the associations between same-sex relationships and offending differed for men and women. In general, men in same-sex relationships were less likely to be a suspect of crime compared to those in opposite-sex relationships [odds ratio (OR) = 0.685; p < .001]. Women in same-sex relationships exhibited higher risk than those in opposite-sex unions (OR = 1.560; p < .001). Similar patterns emerged for most crime types and the discordant sibling models yielded conclusions that were substantively similar to those among the total population.
性少数群体在一系列不良后果方面面临更高的风险。来自美国的先前研究表明,这些风险包括性少数群体女性接触刑事司法系统,但男性则没有。本研究旨在检验这种性少数群体身份与犯罪行为之间的关系是否也存在于像荷兰这样对性少数群体态度更为进步的更世俗的国家。此外,该研究旨在检验这种关系是否适用于各种类型的犯罪行为,以及是否可以用未测量的家庭因素来解释。本研究使用来自荷兰全国人口的纵向数据,包括 75362 名处于同性关系和 3464906 名处于异性关系的个体,比较了男性和女性在同性和异性结合中的犯罪风险。纳入不一致的同胞模型以增加对来自共同家庭因素的可能混杂来源的控制。对六种类型的犯罪(包括财产犯罪、暴力犯罪、破坏财产犯罪和扰乱公共秩序犯罪、交通犯罪、毒品犯罪和其他犯罪)进行了重复分析。结果表明,同性关系与犯罪之间的关联方向在男性和女性之间存在差异。一般来说,与处于异性关系的个体相比,处于同性关系的男性犯罪嫌疑人的可能性较小(优势比 [OR] = 0.685;p <.001)。与处于异性关系的个体相比,处于同性关系的女性犯罪的可能性更高(OR = 1.560;p <.001)。大多数犯罪类型都呈现出类似的模式,不一致的同胞模型得出的结论与总人口中的结论基本一致。