2014
DOI: 10.1080/14043858.2014.926062
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Immigrant crime in Norway and Finland

Abstract: Immigrants are known to be overrepresented in the crime statistics of Nordic countries. However, the composition of immigrant populations varies across countries both in terms of immigrants' country of origin as well as their population structure (age and sex). Cross-country comparison of crime rates is always difficult because of differences in legal systems, but it is even more challenging when using very broad categories of immigrants, lumping heterogeneous groups together. Previous studies have largely com… Show more

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Cited by 45 publications
(37 citation statements)
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References 13 publications
(14 reference statements)
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“…Others assert that established psychological and criminological theories of IPH should be expected to generalize across population groups, covering both immigrant and native populations (e.g. Skardhamar, Aaltonen, & Lehti, 2014). To be sure, if certain groups are found to have greater involvement in registered crime, then increased attention to those groups is warranted.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Others assert that established psychological and criminological theories of IPH should be expected to generalize across population groups, covering both immigrant and native populations (e.g. Skardhamar, Aaltonen, & Lehti, 2014). To be sure, if certain groups are found to have greater involvement in registered crime, then increased attention to those groups is warranted.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…If stereotypes about origin country groups reflect underlying reality, they should be similar across countries because groups that do well in one European country generally do well in other countries as well (Kirkegaard, 2014;Skardhamar, Aaltonen, & Lehti, 2014). Carl (2016), and Kirkegaard and Bjerrekaer (2016).…”
Section: Comparison With Results From the Study Of United Kingdommentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although the vast majority of Swedish studies suggest that immigrants are overrepresented in crime by comparison with the native born population (see Kardell, 2010 for a review), no studies have yet examined whether this gap is increasing or decreasing and whether the direction and rate of change in crime trends differs across immigrant groups and immigrant generations. Immigrants and their children are characterized by considerable heterogeneity in terms of socioeconomic status, levels of social integration, and cultural factorsimplying that the dynamics of crime may not be identical for all immigrants (Skardhamar, Aaltonen, & Lehti, 2014). However, immigrants have generally been studied as a single group, resulting in little knowledge about potential changes in the delinquent involvement of different immigrant groups over time.…”
Section: Background and Aimmentioning
confidence: 99%