学校废除种族隔离对犯罪的影响

David A. Weiner, Byron F Lutz, Jens Ludwig
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引用次数: 27

摘要

美国犯罪的一个最显著的特征是,它不成比例地集中在处于不利地位的、种族隔离的社区。长期以来,人们一直担心,种族隔离本身可能助长犯罪行为。然而,人们对政府减少种族隔离的努力是否能减少犯罪知之甚少。我们通过研究在美国生活中减少种族隔离的最重要的大规模政策——法院命令的学校废除种族隔离——来解决这个问题。我们的研究设计利用了大型城市学区在当地联邦法院命令废除种族隔离的时间上的差异。我们发现,当法院命令得到执行时,黑人青年的凶杀受害率下降了25%左右;凶杀案的逮捕也显著下降。我们还发现了对其他年龄和种族群体的溢出效应的证据,这与表明跨群体大量犯罪的数据以及不同群体的犯罪也通过警察预算约束联系在一起的事实相一致。"犯罪市场"的经济模型表明,第二种机制的影响应随着时间的推移而减弱,因为受害者会通过减少预防犯罪的投资来应对犯罪供应的转变。与这一理论相一致的是,我们发现在法院废除种族隔离命令颁布几年后,警察支出下降了。唯一可检测到的终身持续影响是在那些就读于废除种族隔离学校的出生队列中发现的。
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The Effects of School Desegregation on Crime
One of the most striking features of crime in America is its disproportionate concentration in disadvantaged, racially segregated communities, which has long raised concern that segregation itself may contribute to criminal behavior. Yet little is known about whether government efforts to reduce segregation can reduce crime. We address this question by studying the most important large-scale policy to reduce segregation in American life - court-ordered school desegregation. Our research design exploits variation across large urban school districts in the timing of when they were subject to local Federal court orders to desegregate. We find that for black youth, homicide victimization declines by around 25 percent when court orders are implemented; homicide arrests decline significantly as well. We also find evidence for spillover effects on other age and race groups, consistent with data indicating a sizable amount of offending across groups and with the fact that offending by different groups is also linked through the police budget constraint. Economic models for a "market for offenses" suggest the influence of this second mechanism should attenuate over time as victims respond to a shift in the supply of offenses by reducing investments in crime prevention. Consistent with this theory, we find police spending declines several years after court desegregation orders are enacted. The only detectable life-course-persistent effects are found among birth cohorts that attended desegregated schools.
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