Title: Youth Delinquency and the Neighbourhood Context
1Youth Delinquency and the Neighbourhood Context
- Susan McVie and Paul Norris
- Edinburgh Study of Youth Transitions and Crime
- University of Edinburgh
2Background
- The relationship between crime and place has a
long established history, with crime being more
prevalent in disadvantaged and disordered
neighbourhoods. - Theories have focused on physical conditions of
the area, socio-structural characteristics of
residents and capacity of residents to
self-regulate behaviour. - Recent advances in computing software have
improved capacity for multi-level modelling,
allowing contextual effects at different levels
to be measured. - Gaps in theory about mechanisms at work,
relationships between individual and
neighbourhood level influences and differential
impact of neighbourhoods on other problematic
behaviours (e.g. drug use). - Need to inform policy focus on community based
responses to crime.
3The Edinburgh Study
Aims to expand current understanding of youth
offending by exploring patterns of offending
within the context of individual development,
agency intervention and neighbourhood effects.
Prospective longitudinal study of a single age
cohort including all children starting secondary
schools in city of Edinburgh in August 1998
(n4300). Complex research methodology involving
multiple sources of information over several
annual sweeps (6 to date). High response rates
(81 at sweep 6). Design includes a geographic
information system through which 91 Edinburgh
neighbourhoods have been defined. Various types
of geo-coded data (police recorded crime, census
data and community survey) are linked to cohort
members via home postcode.
4Edinburgh neighbourhoods
- 91 neighbourhoods defined mainly to ensure
statistical power in terms of population size
(approx 4,500-5,000 in each) and geographically
contiguous tracts internally homogenous on key
census indicators. - Index of social and economic stress (demographic,
household, housing and economic instability).
5Neighbourhood effects on youth delinquency and
drug use
6Patterns within neighbourhoods
- There is a long history of research that shows
large differences in offending rates between
different types of neighbourhood.
- Much less research has focused on the impact of
neighbourhood characteristics on patterns of drug
use.
7Variables of interest
- Ordinal measure of delinquency
- Based on frequency of involvement in 17 forms of
delinquency in the last year (72 prevalence). - Highly skewed measure grouped into 6 ordinal
categories (0, 1-5, 6-10, 11-15, 16-20, 21) - Ordinal measure of cannabis use
- Based on frequency of cannabis use in last year
(29 prevalence). - Also highly skewed with many zeros, so grouped
into five categories (0, 1, 2-3, 4-10, 11) - Ordinal measure of hard drug use
- Based on frequency of use of six types of class A
or B drugs in the last year (7 prevalence). - Even more skewed, grouped into 5 categories (0,
1, 2-3, 4-10, 11) - All measured at sweep 5 (age 16)
8Individual level explanatory factors
- A wide range of individual characteristics have
been found to be linked to youth delinquency and
drug use.
- This analysis includes only a small number of
individual control variables - Individual gender
- Individual impulsivity
- Family structure
- Family socio-economic status
9Individual level correlations
Correlations showing the strength of relationship
between the individual explanatory factors and
the three dependent variables.
10Area level explanatory factors
- 2001 Census measures
- - economic deprivation
- - population instability
- 2001 Police recorded crime data
- - crime categories representing street crime
(vandalism, fire-raising, housebreaking, vehicle
crime and non-sexual violent crime) - 2001 Community survey (n1642)
- - neighbourhood dissatisfaction
- - community safety
- - physical disorder
- - collective efficacy
11Area level correlations
Volume measures of delinquency and drug use were
aggregated to the neighbourhood level, and
Spearman correlation used to measure strength of
association between these and the neighbourhood
level variables (n91).
Notes Significant at the 95 level or above.
12Combining area and individual data
- Single level analysis breaks assumptions of
statistical methods.
- Single level analysis may miss interesting causal
relationships.
13Ordinal regression model
Notes Individuals were clustered according to
residential neighbourhood. All variables with
coefficients listed were significant at the plt.05
level. Cannabis user added for hard drug use
model only.
14Conclusions
- Neighbourhoods have some impact on problematic
behaviour, although in cross-sectional analysis
the impact of individual factors is greater. - Different neighbourhood level factors explain
delinquency, cannabis use and hard drug use,
suggesting that different theoretical frameworks
and policy responses are required. - Findings support policies that aim to reduce
crime by focusing on structural inequalities and
economic deprivation within communities.
However, such policies are unlikely to have any
impact on cannabis use with is associated
affluence at both the neighbourhood and the
individual level. - Strategies for tackling hard drug use might be
focused in high crime areas, but more needs to be
understood about this type of substance use in
teenagers. - Simple analysis can be misleading (correlations
showed delinquency more strongly associated with
neighbourhood factors than drug use).
15Future analysis
- More advanced multi-level modelling to examine
the precise amount of variation explained by
neighbourhoods, and whether the effect of
significant individual and neighbourhood factors
varies by neighbourhood. - Expand the pool of potential explanatory factors,
including family, school, peer-related factors,
etc to more fully understand the relationship
between place and behaviour. - Explore the inter-relationship between different
contexts, such as neighbourhoods and formal
interventions by the justice system, and the
differential impact of perceptions and realities. - More detailed investigation of longitudinal
causal mechanisms by exploring the effect of
neighbourhood factors on trajectories of
offending and substance using behaviour (started
work in the area on property crime).
16Further information
- www.law.ed.ac.uk/cls/esytc
- Edinburgh.study_at_ed.ac.uk