2016
DOI: 10.1177/0022427816632573
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Understanding the Mechanisms of Desistance at the Intersection of Race, Gender, and Neighborhood Context

Abstract: Objectives This study tests theorized mechanisms of desistance, and whether the process of desistance is conditioned by social structural position. Methods We investigate how marriage promotes desistance from crime among urban African American males raised in the Woodlawn community, a disadvantaged neighborhood in Chicago. Using hierarchical linear modeling, we test the resiliency of the marriage effect by observing offending trajectories following marital dissolution; is the marriage effect conditional upon… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1
1

Citation Types

0
8
0

Year Published

2018
2018
2022
2022

Publication Types

Select...
8
1

Relationship

1
8

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 14 publications
(8 citation statements)
references
References 45 publications
(63 reference statements)
0
8
0
Order By: Relevance
“…Individuals displaced to new neighborhoods were significantly less likely to reoffend than those who returned to their pre-prison neighborhoods. Shifting to how contexts may matter for desistance, Doherty & Bersani (2016) investigate whether the structural or subjective nature of the mechanisms of desistance is shaped by social-structural position. Results suggest that persistent residence in disadvantaged contexts may impose barriers to subjectively facilitated desistance, rendering structural mechanisms more central compared to those living in less disadvantaged contexts.…”
Section: Structuralmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Individuals displaced to new neighborhoods were significantly less likely to reoffend than those who returned to their pre-prison neighborhoods. Shifting to how contexts may matter for desistance, Doherty & Bersani (2016) investigate whether the structural or subjective nature of the mechanisms of desistance is shaped by social-structural position. Results suggest that persistent residence in disadvantaged contexts may impose barriers to subjectively facilitated desistance, rendering structural mechanisms more central compared to those living in less disadvantaged contexts.…”
Section: Structuralmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Using an innovative modeling approach, Bersani & Doherty (2013) and Doherty & Bersani (2016) evaluated competing theories of desistance by shifting the focus from testing factors associated with theories (marriage, identity) to considering expected theoretical outcomes. Akin to an implication analysis (see Lieberson & Horwich 2008), this research evaluated the nature of change inferred by theories of desistance.…”
Section: Mechanisms Of Changementioning
confidence: 99%
“…It has been stated that this onward process towards criminal desistance is related to different personal and social factors: aging and maturation, race, gender, military service, marriage, and stable and meaningful interpersonal relationships (intimate partners, children, friends, etc. ), motivation and commitment to change, prosocial values, moderate lack of stress, good mental health, structured activities, reevaluation of previous criminal conduct, stable employment, religion, identity change, perception of self-efficacy, expectation about the future, favorable characteristics of the reintegration context, and received social support (Abeling-Judge, 2017; Barr & Simons, 2015;Cauffman, Fine, Thomas, & Monahan, 2017;de Vries Robbé, Mann, Maruna, & Thornton, 2015;Doherty & Bersani, 2016;Forrest, 2014;King, 2013;Rocque & Wels, 2015;Shepherd, Luebbers, & Ogloff, 2016;Skardhamar & Savolainen, 2014;Stouthamer-Loeber, Loeber, Stallings, Lacourse, 2008;Terry & Abrams, 2017;Veysey, Martinez, & Christian, 2013;Walker et al, 2013;Weaver & McNeill, 2015;Zoutewelle-Terovan, van der Geest, Liefbroer, & Bijleveld, 2014).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The history of behavioural and mental health policy and practices is replete with approaches that failed to acknowledge the economic, social and structural barriers experienced by people with disabilities and recovery needs (Ayón & Carlson, 2014). The literature also confirms that the disproportionate number of low-income, Black and Latino men within the prison system represents a significant factor in how the problem and response to mass incarceration is constructed (Alexander, 2012;Doherty & Bersani, 2016;Livingston, Miller, Brunson & Stewart, 2014). Analogous to the history of stigmatising policies and services for people with disabilities and recovery needs, the intersectionality of race and class has served to reinforce punitive policies and services that invest minimal resources in repairing the harm experienced by individuals with a history of incarceration.…”
Section: Parallels In Mental and Behavioural Healthmentioning
confidence: 99%