1st Edition

The Economics of Race and Crime

Edited By Samuel L. Myers Jr., Margaret C. Simms Copyright 1988
    220 Pages
    by Routledge

    220 Pages
    by Routledge

    The relationship between crime and the economy has received too little attention from researchers. This volume remedies that deficit, resurrecting several classic writings on this elusive topic by and about blacks, and presenting new contributions by researchers at the frontier of work on the subject.Among the landmark articles included are W.E.B. Dubois' famous examination of crime in Philadelphia, an analysis of black criminal behavior by Walter Willcox, who was chief statistician of the Census Bureau at the time he wrote this essay, and excerpts from the ninth Atlanta Conference on Negro Crime. The frontier articles use quality microdata to understand particular aspects of criminal justice processes. They address the relationship between employment and criminal behavior, tradeoffs among education, employment, and crime, and the link between overall economic conditions and rates of incarceration. Among the authors represented in the landmark research articles are Harold Votey and Llad Phillips, Richard Freeman, David Good and Maureen Pirog-Good, Dario Melossi, and Samuel Meyers and William Sabol. Richard MaGahey concludes the volume with comments on the current status of research in the field.This volume captures the emerging tension within scholarship on race and crime, and provides both a reflective vision of work in this area as well as state-of-the-art research by leading scholars.

    About the Authors, Preface, Introduction, The Negro Criminal, Negro Criminality, Negro Crime, Negro Criminality in the South, The Negro and the Problem of Law Observance and Administration in the Light of Social Science Research, Inequality of Justice, The Relation of Criminal Activity to Black Youth Employment, The Simultaneous Probit Model of Crime and Employment for Black and White Teenage Males, Rational Choice Models of Crime by Youth, Unemployment and Racial Differences in Imprisonment, Political Business Cycles and Imprisonment Rates in Italy: Report on Work in Progress, Comments, Crime and Employment Research: A Continuing Deadlock

    Biography

    Samuel L. Myers Jr., Margaret C. Simms