Missing pieces: Notes on crime,poverty, and social policy |
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Authors: | Elliott Currie |
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Institution: | (1) University of California, Berkeley |
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Abstract: | A long and impressive criminological tradition links crime to what social scientists call ‘persistent poverty’-and, in particular,
to the corrosive effects of inadequate labor markets on a variety of social institutions. But few anticrime policies have
seriously confronted those conditions, even at the height of the Great Society of the 1960s. With only scattered exceptions,
those policies have sought to enhance the individual capacities of children and youth without substantially altering the surrounding
economic institutions. An anticrime strategy for the next century that is both more effective and consistent with what we
know about the roots of crime must involve measures that more directly address the labor market itself. Among other things,
these measures include direct public job creation, systematic efforts to up grade wages, and greater support for labor organization.
This essay is a revised version of a background paper presented at The Social Science Research Council Policy Conference on
‘Persistent Poverty’ in Washington D.C., November, 1993. |
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