Authors
Randi Hjalmarsson, Matthew J Lindquist
Publication date
2012/3/31
Journal
Journal of Human Resources
Volume
47
Issue
2
Pages
550-582
Publisher
University of Wisconsin Press
Description
Sons (daughters) with criminal fathers have 2.06 (2.66) times higher odds of having a criminal conviction than those with noncriminal fathers. One additional paternal sentence increases sons’ (daughters’) convictions by 32 (53) percent. Compared to traditional labor market measures, the intergenerational transmission of crime is lower than that for high school completion but higher than that for poverty. At the intensive margin, the intergenerational crime relationship is as strong as those for earnings and years of schooling. Parental human capital and parental behaviors can account for 60–80 percent of the intergenerational crime relationship. Paternal role-modeling also matters.
Total citations
20092010201120122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320241312991351516121012121913
Scholar articles
R Hjalmarsson, MJ Lindquist - Like Son: Explaining the Intergenerational Nature of …, 2009