| Literature DB >> 21442045 |
Jeremy Staff1, D Wayne Osgood, John E Schulenberg, Jerald G Bachman, Emily E Messersmith.
Abstract
Most criminological theories predict an inverse relationship between employment and crime, but teenagers' involvement in paid work during the school year is positively correlated with delinquency and substance use. Whether the work-delinquency association is causal or spurious has long been debated. This study estimates the effect of paid work on juvenile delinquency using longitudinal data from the national Monitoring the Future project. We address issues of spuriousness by using a two-level hierarchical model to estimate the relationships of within-individual changes in juvenile delinquency and substance use to those in paid work and other explanatory variables. We also disentangle effects of actual employment from preferences for employment to provide insight about the likely role of time-varying selection factors tied to employment, delinquency, school engagement, and leisure activities. Whereas causal effects of employment would produce differences based on whether and how many hours respondents worked, we found significantly higher rates of crime and substance use among non-employed youth who preferred intensive versus moderate work. Our findings suggest the relationship between high-intensity work and delinquency results from preexisting factors that lead youth to desire varying levels of employment.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21442045 PMCID: PMC3062908 DOI: 10.1111/j.1745-9125.2010.00213.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Criminology ISSN: 0011-1384