Truancy Intervention Reduces Crime: Results from a Randomized Field Trial
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Mazerolle, Lorraine
Antrobus, Emma
Eggins, Elizabeth
Piquero, Alex R
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Abstract
Educational attainment is a fundamental cornerstone to success throughout the life-course. As a result, ensuring that young people remain in school and are not truant is critical. Although the importance of truancy as a risk factor for many adverse outcomes, including crime, has been well-documented, much less methodologically rigorous work has been undertaken to evaluate potentially promising prevention and intervention strategies. This paper uses a randomized field trial method to test how a partnership between police and schools targeting truancy impacts offending in a sample of high-risk truanting young people. We find that the truancy intervention reduces offending and we discuss the implications for practice and directions for future research.
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JUSTICE QUARTERLY
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35
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2
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Criminology