Criminal Careers and Crime Control in Massachusetts [The Glueck Study] [electronic resource] : A Matched-Sample Longitudinal Research Design, Phase I, 1939-1963 John H. Laub, Robert J. Sampson

Format
Data file
Language
English
Εdition
ICPSR Version, 2005-11-04.
Published/​Created
Ann Arbor, Mich. Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor] 1992.
Description
1 data file + machine-readable documentation (text) + SAS setup file(s) + SPSS setup file(s) + Stata setup file(s) + SAS transport + SPSS portable + Stata system

Details

Subject(s)
Series
Restrictions note
Use of these data are restricted to Princeton University students, faculty, and staff for non-commercial statistical analysis and research purposes only.
Summary note
The relationship between crime control policies and fundamental parameters of the criminal career, such as career length, participation in offenses, and frequency and seriousness of offenses committed, is examined in this data collection. The investigators coded, recoded, and computerized parts of the raw data from Sheldon and Eleanor Glueck's three-wave, matched sample study of juvenile and adult criminal behavior, extracting the criminal histories of the 500 delinquents (officially defined) from the Glueck study. Data were originally collected by the Gluecks in 1940 through psychiatric interviews with subjects, parent and teacher reports, and official records obtained from police, court, and correctional files. The subjects were subsequently interviewed again between 1949 and 1965 at or near the age of 25, and again at or near the age of 32. The data coded by Laub and Sampson include only information collected from official records. The data address in part (1) what effects probation, incarceration, and parole have on the length of criminal career and frequency of criminal incidents of an offender, (2) how the effects of criminal control policies vary in relation to the length of sentence, type of offense, and age of the offender, (3) which factors in criminal control policy correlate with criminal career termination, (4) how well age of first offense predicts the length of criminal career, and (5) how age of offender relates to type of offense committed. Every incident of arrest up to the age of 32 for each respondent (ranging from 1 to 51 arrests) is recorded in the data file. Variables include the dates of arrest, up to three charges associated with the arrest, court disposition, and starting and ending dates of probation, incarceration, and parole associated with the arrest.... Cf.: http://webapp.icpsr.umich.edu/cocoon/ICPSR-STUDY/09735.xml
Notes
Title from ICPSR DDI metadata of 2006-09-15.
Type of data
1 data file + machine-readable documentation (text) + SAS setup file(s) + SPSS setup file(s) + Stata setup file(s) + SAS transport + SPSS portable + Stata system
Geographic coverage
Massachusetts, United States
Funding information
United States Department of Justice. NationalInstitute of Justice. 87-IJ-CX-0022
System details
Mode of access: Internet.
Methodology note
Universe: All delinquent boys in correctional schools in the state of Massachusetts during 1940.
Contents
Part 1: Data File; Part 2: SAS Data Definition Statements
Other format(s)
Also available as downloadable files.
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