Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://dspace.mediu.edu.my:8181/xmlui/handle/10419/20169
Title: Guns, drugs and juvenile crime : evidence from a panel of siblings and twins
Keywords: I12
K4
H0
ddc:330
crime
juvenile
twins
guns
drugs
Jugendkriminalität
Waffe
Familie
Drogenkonsum
Vereinigte Staaten
Waffenbesitz
Issue Date: 16-Oct-2013
Publisher: 
Description: Using a nationally-representative panel data set of U.S. high school students (AddHealth data) that contains a relatively large sample of siblings and twins, the paper investigates the impacts of gun availability at home and individual drug use on robbery, burglary, theft and damaging property for juveniles. Using a variety of fixed-effects models that exploit variations over time and between siblings and twins, the results show that gun availability at home increases the propensity to commit crime by about two percentage points for juveniles but has no impact on damaging property. The results indicate that it is unlikely that gun availability is merely a measure of the unobserved home environment because gun availability does not influence other risky or bad behaviors of juveniles such as smoking, drinking and fighting, being expelled from school, lying, and having sex. No support is found for the hypothesis that gun availability decreases the propensity for being victimized. In fact, the results show that having access to guns increases the probability of being cut or stabbed by someone and of someone pulling a knife or gun on the juvenile. Estimates obtained from models that exploit variations over time and between siblings and twins indicate that drug use has a significant impact on the propensity to commit crime. We find that the median impact of cocaine use on the propensity to commit various types of crimes is 11 percentage points. The impact of using inhalants or other drugs is an increase in the propensity to commit crime by 7 and 6 percentage points, respectively.
URI: http://koha.mediu.edu.my:8181/xmlui/handle/10419/20169
Other Identifiers: http://hdl.handle.net/10419/20169
ppn:374498806
Appears in Collections:EconStor

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