• Title of article

    CRIMINAL ACHIEVEMENT, OFFENDER NETWORKS AND THE BENEFITS OF LOW SELF-CONTROL

  • Author/Authors

    Tremblay، Pierre نويسنده , , MORSELLI، CARLO نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
  • Pages
    -772
  • From page
    773
  • To page
    0
  • Abstract
    This study follows recent research on criminal earnings and examines the impact of underlying traits (low self-control) and personal organization features (nonredundant networking) on the criminal earnings of a sample of incarcerated offenders previously involved in market and predatory crimes. Controlling for various background factors (age, noncriminal income, lambda and costs of doing crime), both low selfcontrol and nonredundant networking independently explain why some offenders are more successful than others in achieving higher monetary standards through crime. Although efficient, brokerage-like networking enhances market offendersʹ earnings, low self-control emerges as an asset for predatory offenders: the lower their self-control, the higher their criminal earnings. For market offenders, however, low selfcontrol has no direct effect, but it does mitigate the impact of effective networking on criminal earnings. The results emerging from this study have implications for Gottfredson and Hirschiʹs theory of crime and the advent of a criminal network perspective. Extensions are also made toward the conventional\criminal embeddedness framework and deterrence research.
  • Keywords
    Hydrolysis , functionality , Solubility , emulsification , gelation , Foaming , biological activity , immunity , Probiotic , Bitterness , allergenicity , milk protein , peptides
  • Journal title
    CRIMINOLOGY
  • Serial Year
    2004
  • Journal title
    CRIMINOLOGY
  • Record number

    116247