Unemployment, business cycles, and crime specialization: Canadian provinces, 1981-2009
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Linning, Shannon J
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Abstract
The relationship between unemployment and crime is complex, consisting of two independent and counteracting effects: motivation and guardianship. The Cantor and Land model integrated these two effects leading to a new literature investigating the relationship between unemployment and crime. However, this literature always considers the impact of unemployment (or some other measure of the economy) on the volume or rate of crime. In this paper, we investigate the role unemployment plays in crime specialization on the Canadian provinces, 1981–2009. Using panel data and a hybrid modeling technique we find that unemployment impacts crime specialization, but this impact varies in magnitude and by crime type.
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Australian and New Zealand Journal of Criminology
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49
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3
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International and comparative law
Criminology
Psychology
Social Sciences
Criminology & Penology
Crime specialization
hybrid modeling
location quotient
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Andresen, MA; Linning, SJ, Unemployment, business cycles, and crime specialization: Canadian provinces, 1981-2009, Australian and New Zealand Journal of Criminology, 2016, 49 (3), pp. 332-350