The crime decline in cross-national context: a panel analysis of homicide rates within latent trajectory groups

IF 1.4 Q2 CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY Global Crime Pub Date : 2021-05-04 DOI:10.1080/17440572.2021.1920931
James Tuttle, P. Mccall, K. Land
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Abstract

ABSTRACT During the 1990s, the United States and other wealthy democracies experienced a decline in homicide rates. However, not all nations shared this trend. Despite disparate homicide patterns, researchers usually examine the average effect of correlates on homicide, potentially obscuring the impact of heterogeneity within large samples. The current study addresses this implicit homogeneity assumption by identifying three distinct latent trajectory groups of homicide trends among 77 nations from 1989 to 2010. To examine differences in the correlates of homicide trends, we analyse the impact of demographic and economic influences on homicide rates in separate fixed-effects panel regression analyses for each trajectory group as well as for the overall sample. We find that demographic and economic forces impact homicide rates differently across subsets of nations. Our findings suggest that universal explanations of 1990s cross-national homicide trends are misleading, as the same set of factors influence homicide rates differently across national contexts.
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跨国背景下的犯罪率下降:潜在轨迹组内凶杀率的小组分析
在20世纪90年代,美国和其他富裕的民主国家的凶杀率有所下降。然而,并非所有国家都有这种趋势。尽管杀人模式不同,但研究人员通常会检查相关因素对杀人的平均影响,这可能会掩盖大样本中异质性的影响。目前的研究通过确定1989年至2010年间77个国家的凶杀趋势的三个不同的潜在轨迹组来解决这一隐含的同质性假设。为了检验杀人趋势相关因素的差异,我们对每个轨迹组以及整个样本进行了单独的固定效应面板回归分析,分析了人口和经济对杀人率的影响。我们发现人口和经济力量对杀人率的影响在不同的国家有所不同。我们的研究结果表明,对20世纪90年代跨国杀人趋势的普遍解释具有误导性,因为相同的一组因素在不同的国家背景下对杀人率的影响不同。
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来源期刊
Global Crime
Global Crime CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY-
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
4.50%
发文量
22
期刊介绍: Global Crime is a social science journal devoted to the study of crime broadly conceived. Its focus is deliberately broad and multi-disciplinary and its first aim is to make the best scholarship on crime available to specialists and non-specialists alike. It endorses no particular orthodoxy and draws on authors from a variety of disciplines, including history, sociology, criminology, economics, political science, anthropology and area studies. The editors welcome contributions on any topic relating to crime, including organized criminality, its history, activities, relations with the state, its penetration of the economy and its perception in popular culture.
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