Recidivism in Context: A Meta-Analysis of Neighborhood Concentrated Disadvantage and Repeat Offending

This study meta-analytically examined the effect of macro-level concentrated disadvantage on individual-level recidivism. Search results indicated research to date is designed to assess the incremental effect of concentrated disadvantage on recidivism above other risk factors. Using a multilevel ran...

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Veröffentlicht in:Criminal justice and behavior 2022-06, Vol.49 (6), p.783-806
Hauptverfasser: Jacobs, Leah A., Ashcraft, Laura Ellen, Sewall, Craig J. R., Wallace, Danielle, Folb, Barbara L.
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container_issue 6
container_start_page 783
container_title Criminal justice and behavior
container_volume 49
creator Jacobs, Leah A.
Ashcraft, Laura Ellen
Sewall, Craig J. R.
Wallace, Danielle
Folb, Barbara L.
description This study meta-analytically examined the effect of macro-level concentrated disadvantage on individual-level recidivism. Search results indicated research to date is designed to assess the incremental effect of concentrated disadvantage on recidivism above other risk factors. Using a multilevel random effects model, we found the estimated incremental effect of concentrated disadvantage was nonsignificant (log odds ratio = 0.03, p = .15, k = 48). However, effects varied by recidivism and offense type. Concentrated disadvantage does not add incremental utility when predicting general recidivism, but it does add incremental utility when assessing arrests (especially drug arrests) and violent reconvictions. Although individual-level risk factors and markers seem to explain most of the relationship between concentrated disadvantage and reoffending, concentrated disadvantage should not be summarily dismissed as irrelevant to recidivism. The overrepresentation of disadvantaged neighborhoods among the justice-involved—and the overrepresentation of the justice-involved in disadvantaged neighborhoods—requires further research on the disadvantage–recidivism relationship.
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); SAGE Publications
subjects Arrests
Court decisions
Individual differences
Meta-analysis
Neighborhoods
Offending
Poverty
Random effects
Recidivism
Representativeness
Risk factors
title Recidivism in Context: A Meta-Analysis of Neighborhood Concentrated Disadvantage and Repeat Offending
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