Locked Out of the Labor Market? State-Level Hidden Sentences and the Labor Market Outcomes of Recently Incarcerated Young Adults

A long literature attests to labor market penalties for having a criminal record. No research, however, has explored whether state-level policies that restrict social participation of the justice-involved contribute to these labor market consequences. Such policies, or hidden sentences, have clear i...

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Veröffentlicht in:RSF : Russell Sage Foundation journal of the social sciences 2020-03, Vol.6 (1), p.132-151
Hauptverfasser: Warner, Cody, Kaiser, Joshua, Houle, Jason N.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A long literature attests to labor market penalties for having a criminal record. No research, however, has explored whether state-level policies that restrict social participation of the justice-involved contribute to these labor market consequences. Such policies, or hidden sentences, have clear implications for labor market outcomes but are difficult to measure. In this article, we leverage a combination of nationally representative individual data and state-level data on hidden sentences to ask whether the labor market penalties of incarceration are contingent on a state’s hidden sentence regime in young adulthood. Our results demonstrate that living in a state with moderate and high hidden sentences exacerbates the labor market consequences of incarceration, and that this pattern may contribute to racial disparities in labor market outcomes following incarceration.
ISSN:2377-8253
2377-8261
DOI:10.7758/RSF.2020.6.1.06