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young people Meta-Analysis
of Adolescent Crime and Substance Use, 1981-1995 Gordon
E. Kenney, Ph.D. The University of Memphis Memphis, Tennessee, USA December,
1996 INTRODUCTION The
use of psychoactive substances has been cited by drug enforcement officials as
a cause of criminal behavior. Apart from the manufacture, sale, and/or delivery
of illicit substances, substance *use* has been regarded as a primary precipitant
of criminal behavior, especially violent behavior (e.g., Drug Enforcement Administration,
1994). To date, however, it seems that such assertions have been based on anecdotal
evidence, with little, if any, empirical support. Even data from the federal government
fails to support such a link. For example, during 9 contemporaneous reporting
periods between 1972 and 1990, the correlations between adolescent (ages 17 and
younger) violent, property, and overall crime rates and mean adolescent (ages
12-17) usage rates for 10 substances (both licit and illicit) were .09, .27, and
.20, respectively (Federal Bureau of Investigation, 1972-90; National Institute
on Drug Abuse, 1991). These correlations can hardly be viewed as suggestive of
any meaningful relationships between crime and substance use. Such evidence, however,
is circumstantial. Other indicators are needed to establish any real relationship,
whether large or small, between crime and drug use. The
purpose of this study was to excavate the body of recent scholarly research in
this domain for any evidence concerning the role of substance use in criminal
acts perpetuated by adolescents and to summarize these findings using meta-analysis
(Wolf, 1986). METHOD
& PROCEDURES Scholarly
research products of a primary nature were gleaned from social science databases
(including Dissertation Abstracts International, Educational Resources Information
Clearinghouse, PsycLit, and metropolitan Memphis, Tennessee, book holdings). The
search was limited to studies concerning adolescent criminology reported between
1981 and 1995. Resultant
inferential statistics from each study pertaining to general delinquency, reoffense,
and/or violence as each related to substance use were converted to effect sizes
in the form of r using Wolf's (1986) formulae. The r statistic, here used as an
effect size, remains essentially a correlation coefficient which ranges from -1.0
to +1.0, where -1.0 constitutes a perfect negative relationship, +1.0 constitutes
a perfect positive relationship, and 0.0 constitutes absolutely no relationship.
A squared correlation coefficient (r^2) represents the percentage of shared variance
among the variables in question. RESULTS Fifteen
(15) primary research studies were found which met the aforementioned criteria
(see Table 1). Of these, 13 were conducted in 10 states in the United States,
and 2 were conducted in Canada. There were 6 research articles from refereed journals,
6 dissertations/theses, 2 unpublished conference research presentations, and 1
unpublished research report. A total of 3,583 adolescent offenders were involved
in these 15 studies. The
mean unweighted r for the relationship between adolescent crime and substance
use was .22 (df = 13, not significant), with a median of .17, and a range of .00
to .68. The amount of shared variance between overall adolescent crime and substance
use was about 5%. The strength of these effect size estimates was considered low. Only
4 of the studies investigated the relationship between adolescent violent crime
and substance use (total number of offenders studied was 834). The mean unweighted
r for these studies was .10 (df = 13, not significant), with a median of .08,
and a range of .07 to .15. The amount of shared variance between violent adolescent
crime and substance use was 1%. These effect size estimates were considered very
low.
| Study | N | Outcome | Locale | r |
| Vincent (1981) | 64
| reoffense | MD | .00 |
| Dawkins & Dawkins (1983) | 342
| delinquency | MD | .30 |
| Andrews et al. (1986) | 192 | reoffense | Canada
| .33 | | Lindgren
et al. (1986) | 84 | reoffense | IA | .25 |
| Cornell (1987) | 72 | violence | VA
| .07 | | Veletza
(1990) | 64 | delinquency | MA | .55 |
| Watts & Wright (1990) | 437 | delinquency | TX
| .68 | | Anderson
(1991) | 514 | reoffense
| Canada | .29 |
| Dembo et al. (1991) | 398 | violence | FL | .09 |
| Kahn & Chambers (1991) | 221 | violence | WA
| .07 | | Archibald
et al. (1992) | 779 | reoffense | MA | .00 |
| Carter (1992) | 48
| reoffense | ID | .14 |
| Duncan (1992/93) | 130 | reoffense | FL
| .17 | | Wierson
(1992/93) | 95 | reoffense | GA
| .26 | | Kenney
(1995) | 143 | violence | TN
| .15 | Note.
Studies listed chronologically. Two-letter locale codes refer to states in the
USA. No discernible
temporal pattern was observed. Overall, the correlation between year of study
and effect size estimate was .02 (df = 13, not significant), which was considered
very low. Among
7 studies conducted in the "north" (i.e., Canada, Idaho, Iowa, Massachusetts,
and Washington) the mean unweighted effect size was .23 (df = 5, not significant),
with a median of .25, and a range of .00 to 55. This effect size was considered
low. Among 8 studies conducted in the "south" (i.e., Florida, Georgia,
Maryland, Tennessee, Texas, and Virginia) the mean unweighted effect size was
.22 (df = 6, not significant), with a median of .16, and a range of .00 to .68.
This effect size was considered low. The effect sizes based on geography were
not considered to be substantially different. Gender,
ethnocultural heritage, property crimes, and particular substances used were not
evaluated because these variables were seldom noted in more than a few of the
selected studies. CONCLUSIONS
The relationship between adolescent crime and substance use was found to be small.
Overall, substance use accounted for only about 5% of the variance associated
with overall adolescent criminal behavior, and less than 1% of the variance associated
with adolescent violent behavior. These findings were remarkably similar to those
involving federal government data noted earlier. Neither temporal nor geographic
patterns were observed concerning the effect size estimates reported in the 15
studies. Therefore,
assertions about the precipitous role of substance use in adolescent crime do
not appear to be supported by the body of recent scholarly research in this area.
Similar investigations concerning adult crime and substance use are warranted
before any definite conclusions may be reached about this controversial issue.
It is clear, however, that adolescent substance use, though a crime in and of
itself, is not fundamentally related to broader indices of adolescent crime.
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