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Gender Differences in the Educational Penalty of Delinquent Behavior: Evidence from an Analysis of Siblings

Authors
Kim, Jinho
Issue Date
Mar-2021
Publisher
SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
Keywords
Delinquency; Educational attainment; Gender; Fixed effects
Citation
JOURNAL OF QUANTITATIVE CRIMINOLOGY, v.37, no.1, pp.179 - 216
Indexed
SSCI
SCOPUS
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF QUANTITATIVE CRIMINOLOGY
Volume
37
Number
1
Start Page
179
End Page
216
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/49518
DOI
10.1007/s10940-020-09450-0
ISSN
0748-4518
Abstract
Objectives This study examines: (a) whether the association between juvenile delinquency and educational attainment differs by gender, and (b) which factors underlie such gender differences. Methods In order to account for the influence of unobservable family-background factors, this study applies sibling fixed-effects models on the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health). As a sensitivity check, I explore whether observed gender differences are robust to different measurements of delinquency and the potential presence of sibling spillover effects. Results Nearly half of the association between juvenile delinquency and educational attainment is attributable to unobservable factors related to family background. This study finds that controlling for unobserved family-level heterogeneity substantially attenuates the association between juvenile delinquency and educational attainment among females, making it no longer statistically significant. Among males, sibling fixed-effects estimates suggest that a one-standard-deviation increase in delinquent involvement is associated with a reduction in 0.23 years of schooling and a 4.6 percentage point increase in the probability of high school dropout. Supplementary analyses show that male delinquents face major disadvantages in social relationships in school settings and display lower levels of educational aspirations as well as effort. No such patterns are found among female delinquents. Conclusions This study finds a negative association between delinquency and educational attainment only for males but not for females. Results suggest that failure to account for unobserved family-level heterogeneity spuriously inflates the delinquency-education association to a larger extent among females than males.
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