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No experience required: Violent crime and anticipated,vicarious, and experienced racial discrimination
Institution:1. Ball State University, Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology, North Quad, 282, Muncie, IN 47306, United States;2. Florida State University, College of Criminology and Criminal Justice, Eppes Hall, 145 Convocation Way, Tallahassee, FL 32306, United States
Abstract:There is a growing body of evidence linking racial discrimination and juvenile crime, and a number of theories explain this relationship. In this study, we draw on one popular approach, Agnew's general strain theory, and extend prior research by moving from a focus on experienced discrimination to consider two other forms, anticipated and vicarious discrimination. Using data on black, white, and Hispanic youth, from the Project on Human Development in Chicago Neighborhoods (PHDCN), we find that experienced, anticipated, and to a lesser extent, vicarious discrimination, significantly predict violent crime independent of a set of neighborhood, parental, and individual level controls, including prior violent offending. Additional analyses on the specific contexts of discrimination reveal that violence is associated with the anticipation of police discrimination. The effects tend to be larger for African American than Hispanic youth, but the differences are not statistically significant. These findings support the thesis that, like other strains, discrimination may not have to be experienced directly to influence offending.
Keywords:General strain theory  Anticipated  Vicarious and experienced discrimination  Black and hispanic youth  Adolescent violence
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