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Differential Cost Avoidance and Successful Criminal Careers
- Source :
- Crime & Delinquency. 53:38-63
- Publication Year :
- 2007
- Publisher :
- SAGE Publications, 2007.
-
Abstract
- Using a sample of adjudicated French Canadian males from the Montreal Two Samples Longitudinal Study, this article investigates individual and social characteristics associated with differential cost avoidance. The main objective of this study is to determine whether such traits are randomly distributed across differential degrees of cost avoidance or whether they reflect some degree of rationality. Differential cost avoidance is a composite measure that includes the ratio of self-reported career length to officially recorded career length, the ratio of self-reported offending gravity to officially recorded gravity, and the ratio of time “free” to periods of incarceration. Findings reveal that it is particularly difficult to predict differential cost avoidance at early ages. The main predictors of the residual degree of differential cost avoidance in the early 30s include substance use (especially drugs), the accumulation of debts, and the use of violence in the perpetration of crime. Implications for desistance research are discussed.
- Subjects :
- Longitudinal study
Social characteristics
media_common.quotation_subject
050901 criminology
05 social sciences
Rationality
Differential (mechanical device)
Sample (statistics)
Self-control
medicine.disease
Pathology and Forensic Medicine
Substance abuse
medicine
French canadian
0501 psychology and cognitive sciences
0509 other social sciences
Psychology
Law
Social psychology
health care economics and organizations
050104 developmental & child psychology
media_common
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 1552387X and 00111287
- Volume :
- 53
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Crime & Delinquency
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........d83540f4dce809979d080e52491c79c1