The Coaction of Neighborhood and Individual Effects on Juvenile Recidivism

Ecological approaches to explaining juvenile delinquency emphasize the importance of spatial influences on patterns of delinquency. Studies of recidivism among juvenile offenders, on the other hand, have rarely taken neighborhood influences into account. Moreover, conventional statistical approaches...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cityscape (Washington, D.C.) D.C.), 2011-01, Vol.13 (3), p.33-55
Hauptverfasser: Harris, Philip W., Mennis, Jeremy, Obradovic, Zoran, Izenman, Alan J., Grunwald, Heidi E.
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container_issue 3
container_start_page 33
container_title Cityscape (Washington, D.C.)
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creator Harris, Philip W.
Mennis, Jeremy
Obradovic, Zoran
Izenman, Alan J.
Grunwald, Heidi E.
description Ecological approaches to explaining juvenile delinquency emphasize the importance of spatial influences on patterns of delinquency. Studies of recidivism among juvenile offenders, on the other hand, have rarely taken neighborhood influences into account. Moreover, conventional statistical approaches adapted for investigating spatial neighborhood effects, such as hierarchical linear modeling (HLM), are typically subject to assumptions regarding the nature of the spatial relationships under investigation that may, in fact, mask relevant neighborhood influences on individual outcomes. The study discussed in this article applied geographic analysis to the analysis of adjudicated juvenile delinquents assigned to court-ordered programs by the Family Court of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. We examined the simultaneous effects of neighborhood and individual (including family) characteristics on juvenile recidivism using local spatial clustenng of probabilities of reoffending. Geographic Information Systems provided the technology to integrate diverse spatial data sets, quantify spatial relationships, and visualize the results of spatial analysis. In the context of juvenile recidivism, this approach provided new insights on how and why recidivism rates vary from place to place. We found not only that recidivism was concentrated in specific areas of the city, but also that types of recidivism offenses were spatially concentrated. Importantly, the findings also show that predictors of reoffense vary from place to place.
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Studies of recidivism among juvenile offenders, on the other hand, have rarely taken neighborhood influences into account. Moreover, conventional statistical approaches adapted for investigating spatial neighborhood effects, such as hierarchical linear modeling (HLM), are typically subject to assumptions regarding the nature of the spatial relationships under investigation that may, in fact, mask relevant neighborhood influences on individual outcomes. The study discussed in this article applied geographic analysis to the analysis of adjudicated juvenile delinquents assigned to court-ordered programs by the Family Court of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. We examined the simultaneous effects of neighborhood and individual (including family) characteristics on juvenile recidivism using local spatial clustenng of probabilities of reoffending. Geographic Information Systems provided the technology to integrate diverse spatial data sets, quantify spatial relationships, and visualize the results of spatial analysis. In the context of juvenile recidivism, this approach provided new insights on how and why recidivism rates vary from place to place. We found not only that recidivism was concentrated in specific areas of the city, but also that types of recidivism offenses were spatially concentrated. 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source Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; Jstor Complete Legacy
subjects Behavior
Criminal justice
Criminal offenses
Drug related crimes
Family law
Geographic information systems
Juvenile delinquency
Juvenile offenders
Neighborhoods
Population
Postal codes
Public policy
Recidivism
Recidivism prediction
Studies
Symposium: Crime and Urban Form
System theory
Urban crime
Young offenders
title The Coaction of Neighborhood and Individual Effects on Juvenile Recidivism
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