Stewart J. D’Alessio Lisa Stolzenberg Troy Teresak D’Alessio The Hidden Cost of Immigration

The Hidden Cost of Immigration

von Stewart J. D’Alessio Lisa Stolzenberg Troy Teresak

Black Labor Market Displacement and Urban Crime

Preis unbekannt

Buch in deiner Nähe kaufen


...oder deine aktuelle Postleitzahl eingeben:
oder

Beschreibung

This brief reconceptualizes the immigration–crime relationship by examining how immigration reshapes low-skill labor markets in ways that may disproportionately disadvantage economically marginalized Black workers. Challenging the prevailing consensus that immigration either reduces crime or has no effect, it shifts attention away from immigrant offending and toward the structural conditions under which immigration may indirectly elevate crime among Black populations. Rather than treating immigration as uniformly beneficial or criminogenic, the brief argues that its social consequences are unevenly distributed across racial and economic groups.

Results from longitudinal analyses of city-level data drawn from the National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS) and the U.S. Census show that higher levels of immigration are associated with increased weekday and weeknight/weekend crime levels among Black but not White offenders. These findings suggest that competition within low-skill labor markets may weaken legitimate employment opportunities for some economically vulnerable Black workers, thereby increasing exposure to criminogenic pressures.

Integrating perspectives on labor market segmentation, strain, routine activity, and race-specific opportunity, the brief develops a theoretical framework linking immigration, racial inequality, and urban crime. By reframing the immigration–crime debate through the lens of economic displacement and racial inequality, this work offers a provocative, policy-relevant account of how immigration and racial justice agendas intersect in contemporary urban America.


This brief reconceptualizes the immigration–crime relationship by examining how immigration reshapes low-skill labor markets in ways that may disproportionately disadvantage economically marginalized Black workers. Challenging the prevailing consensus that immigration either reduces crime or has no effect, it shifts attention away from immigrant offending and toward the structural conditions under which immigration may indirectly elevate crime among Black populations. Rather than treating immigration as uniformly beneficial or criminogenic, the brief argues that its social consequences are unevenly distributed across racial and economic groups.

Results from longitudinal analyses of city-level data drawn from the National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS) and the U.S. Census show that higher levels of immigration are associated with increased weekday and weeknight/weekend crime levels among Black but not White offenders. These findings suggest that competition within low-skill labor markets may weaken legitimate employment opportunities for some economically vulnerable Black workers, thereby increasing exposure to criminogenic pressures.

Integrating perspectives on labor market segmentation, strain, routine activity, and race-specific opportunity, the brief develops a theoretical framework linking immigration, racial inequality, and urban crime. By reframing the immigration–crime debate through the lens of economic displacement and racial inequality, this work offers a provocative, policy-relevant account of how immigration and racial justice agendas intersect in contemporary urban America.


Reframes immigration–crime debates by centering labor-market displacement of Black workers Reveals race-specific weekday crime effects using temporally disaggregated NIBRS data Links immigration, racial inequality, and crime with clear implications for labor and justice policy

Autor*in

Stewart J. D’Alessio

Themen in »The Hidden Cost of Immigration«

Immigration and crime Black labor-market displacement Racialized economic inequality urban crime patterns NIBRS-based criminological analysis

Stimmen zu »The Hidden Cost of Immigration«

Details

ISBN: 9783032299499
Verlag: Springer International Publishing
Erscheinung: 22.08.2026

Link teilen


Über buchnah.de | Die Buchhandlungen | Die Verlage | Impressum & Kontakt | Datenschutz | Presse


Auf dieser Seite kannst Du Buchhandlungen in der Nähe finden