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Journal Article

Citation

Alm S. Acta Sociol. 2018; 61(3): 263-282.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Scandinavian Sociological Association, Publisher SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/0001699317697363

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

On an individual level, criminal offending is linked to resource deficiencies. Since evictions tend to affect society's weakest groups, we would expect evicted individuals to be convicted of crime to a higher degree than others even before eviction. But is there also a direct effect of eviction on criminal convictions? The aim of this study was to isolate the effect of eviction on criminal convictions. Propensity score matching was used and the analyses included all individuals evicted in Sweden from 2009 to 2010 (n = 5050), and a 10% sample of the adult population (n = 770,000). After matching based on relevant background factors, the analyses showed a significant increase in criminal convictions from the year of eviction until the end of the period studied, two to three years later. The pattern was similar for men and women. Future research should investigate eviction in relation to different types of crime.


Language: en

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