Abstract
In the late 1970s and early 1980s, several important reviews of the literature failed to establish a clear consensus on the relationship between economic conditions and violent crime. The research presented here applies the procedures of meta-analysis to 34 aggregate data studies reporting on violent crime, poverty, and income inequality. These studies reported a total of 76 zero-order correlation coefficients for all measures of violent crime with either poverty or income inequality. Of the 76 coefficients, all but 2, or 97 percent, were positive. Of the positive coefficients, nearly 80 percent were of at least moderate strength (>.25). It is concluded that poverty and income inequality are each associated with violent crime. The analysis, however, shows considerable variation in the estimated size of the relationships and suggests that homicide and assault may be more closely associated with poverty or income inequality than are rape and robbery.
| Arthur, J. A. (1991). Socioeconomic predictors of crime in rural Georgia. Criminal Justice Review, 16, 29-41. Google Scholar, Link | |
| Avison, W. R. , & Loring, P. L. (1986). Population diversity and cross-national homicide: The effects of inequality and heterogeneity. Criminology, 24, 733-749. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Bailey, W. C. (1984). Poverty, inequality, and city homicide rates. Criminology, 22, 531-550. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Balkwell, J. W. (1990). Ethnic inequality and the rate of homicide. Social Forces, 69(1), 53-70. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Baron, L. , & Straus, M. A. (1988). Cultural and economic sources of homicide in the United States. The Sociological Quarterly, 29(3), 371-390. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Bennett, R. R. (1991). Development and crime: A cross-national, time-series analysis of competing models. The Sociological Quarterly, 32(3), 343-363. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Blau, J. R. , & Blau, P. M. (1982). The cost of inequality: Metropolitan structure and violent crime. American Sociological Review, 47, 114-129. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Blau, P. M. , & Golden, R. M. (1986). Metropolitan structure and criminal violence. The Sociological Quarterly, 27, 15-26. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Box, S. (1987). Recession, crime and punishment. Totowa, NJ: Barnes & Noble. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Braithwaite, J. (1989). Crime, shame, and reintegration. Cambridge, MA: Cambridge University Press. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Braithwaite, J. , & Braithwaite, V. (1980). The effect of income inequality and social democracy on homicide. British Journal of Criminology, 20, 45-53. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Bronfenbrenner, M. (1971). Distribution theory. New York, NY: Aldine-Atherton. Google Scholar | |
| Brownfield, D. (1986). Social class and violent behavior. Criminology, 24, 421-438. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Cantor, D. , & Land, K. (1985). Unemployment and crime rates in the post-World War II U.S.A.: A theoretical and empirical analysis. American Sociological Review, 50, 317-332. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Carroll, L. , & Jackson, P. I. (1983). Inequality, opportunity, and crime rates in central cities. Criminology, 21, 178-194. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Chilton, R. J. (1964). Continuities in delinquency area research: A comparison of studies for Baltimore, Detroit, and Indianapolis. American Sociological Review, 29, 71-83. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Chiricos, T. G. (1987). Rates of crime and unemployment: An analysis of aggregate research evidence. Social Problems, 34, 187-212. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Clelland, D. , & Carter, T. J. (1980). The new myth of class and crime. Criminology, 18, 319-336. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Cohen, A. K. (1955). Delinquent boys. Glencoe, IL: Free Press. Google Scholar | |
| Crutchfield, R. D. (1989). Labor stratification and violent crime. Social Forces, 68(2), 489-512. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Crutchfield, R. D. , Geerken, M. R., & Gove, W. R. (1982). Crime rate and social integration. Criminology, 20, 467-478. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Currie, E. (1985). Confronting crime. New York, NY: Pantheon Books. Google Scholar | |
| DeFronzo, J. (1983). Economic assistance to impoverished Americans. Criminology, 21, 119-136. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Devine, J. A. , Sheley, J. F., & Smith, M. D. (1988). Macroeconomic and social-control policy influences on crime rate changes, 1948-1985. American Sociological Review, 53, 407-420. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Elliott, D. S. , & Ageton, S. (1980). Reconciling race and class differences in self-reported and official estimates of delinquency. American Sociological Review, 45, 95. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Elliott, D. S. , & Huizinga, D. (1978). Economic factors in crime and delinquency: A critical review of the empirical evidence. In House of Representatives, Unemployment and crime: Hearings before the Subcommittee on Crime of the Committee on the Judiciary (pp. 601-626). Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office. Google Scholar | |
| Elliott, D. S. , & Huizinga, D. (1983). Social class and delinquent behavior in a national youth panel, 1976-1980. Criminology, 21, 149-177. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Engels, F. (1968). The conditions of the working class in England. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. Google Scholar | |
| Groves, W. B. , McCleary, R., & Newman, G. R. (1985). Religion, modernization, and world crime. Comparative Social Research, 8, 59-78. Google Scholar | |
| Hansmann, H. B. , & Quigley, J. M. (1982). Population heterogeneity and the sociogenesis of homicide. Social Forces, 61, 206-224. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Harries, K. D. (1976). Cities and crime: A geographic model. Criminology, 14, 369-386. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Hartnagel, T. F. , & Lee, G. W. (1990, October). Urban crime in Canada. Canadian Journal of Criminology, 32, 591-606. Google Scholar | |
| Huber, J. (1991). Macro-micro linkages in sociology. Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications, Inc. Google Scholar | |
| Huff-Corzine, L. , Corzine, J., & Moore, D. C. (1986). Southern exposure: Deciphering the South's influence on homicide rates. Social Forces, 64, 906-924. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Hunter, J. E. , & Schmidt, F. L. (1990). Methods of meta-analysis. Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications. Google Scholar | |
| Hyde, J. S. , & Linn, M. C. (1986). The psychology of gender: Advances through meta-analysis. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press. Google Scholar | |
| Jackson, P. I. (1984). Opportunity and crime: A function of city size. Sociology and Social Research, 68, 172-193. Google Scholar | |
| Jacobs, D. (1981). Inequality and economic crime. Sociology and Social Research, 66, 12-28. Google Scholar | |
| Jacobs, D. , & Britt, D. (1979). Inequality and police use of deadly force: An empirical assessment of a conflict hypothesis. Social Problems, 26(4), 403-412. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Kennedy, L. W. , Silverman, R. A., & Forde, D. R. (1991). Homicide in urban Canada: Testing the impact of economic inequality and social disorganization. Canadian Journal of Sociology, 16(4), 397-410. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Kick, E. L. , & LaFree, G. D. (1985). Development and the social context of murder and theft. Comparative Social Research, 8, 37-58. Google Scholar | |
| Krahn, H. , Hartnagel, T. F., & Gartrell, J. W. (1986). Income inequality and homicide rates: Cross-national data and criminological theories. Criminology, 24, 269-295. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Krohn, M. D. (1976). Inequality, unemployment and crime: A cross-national analysis. The Sociological Quarterly, 17, 303-313. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Land, K. C. , McCall, P. L., & Cohen, L. E. (1990). Structural covariates of homicide rates: Are there any invariances across time and social space? American Journal of Sociology, 95, 922-963. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Lazarsfeld, P. , & Menzel, H. (1965). On the relations between individual and collective properties. In A. Etzioni (Ed.), Complex organizations: A sociological reader (pp. 422-440). New York, NY: Holt, Rinehart and Winston. Google Scholar | |
| Lieberman, L. , & Smith, A. B. (1986). Crime rates and poverty-A reexamination. Crime and Social Justice, 25, 166-177. Google Scholar | |
| Lieberson, S. (1985). Making it count: The improvement of social research and theory. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. Google Scholar | |
| Liska, A. (1990). The significance of aggregate dependent variables and contextual independent variables for linking macro and micro theories. Social Psychology Quarterly, 53, 292-301. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Liska, A. E. , & Chamlin, M. B. (1984). Social structure and crime control among macrosocial units. American Journal of Sociology, 90, 383-395. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Loftin, C. , & Hill, R. H. (1974). Regional subculture and homicide: An examination of the Gastil-Hackney thesis. American Sociological Review, 39, 714-724. Google Scholar, Crossref, Medline | |
| Loftin, C. , & Parker, R. N. (1985). An errors-in-variable model of the effect of poverty on urban homicide rates. Criminology, 23, 269-287. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| McCall, P. L. , Land, K. C., & Cohen, L. E. (1992). Violent criminal behavior: Is there a general and continuing influence of the South? Social Science Research, 21, 286-310. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Messner, S. F. (1980). Income inequality and murder rates: Some cross-national findings. Comparative Social Research, 3, 185-198. Google Scholar | |
| Messner, S. F. (1982a). Poverty, inequality, and the urban homicide rate. Criminology, 20, 103-114. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Messner, S. F. (1982b). Societal development, social equality, and homicide: A cross-national test of a Durkheimian model. Social Forces, 61, 225-240. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Messner, S. F. (1983a). Regional and racial effects on the urban homicide rate: The subculture of violence revisited. American Journal of Sociology, 88, 997-1007. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Messner, S. F. (1983b). Regional differences in the economic correlates of the urban homicide rate: Some evidence on the importance of cultural context. Criminology, 21, 477-488. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Messner, S. F. (1989). Economic discrimination and societal homicide rates: Further evidence on the cost of inequality. American Sociological Review, 54, 597-611. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Messner, S. F. , & Golden, R. M. (1992). Racial inequality and racially disaggregated homicide rates: An assessment of alternative theoretical explanations. Criminology, 30, 421-447. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Messner, S. F. , & South, S. J. (1986). Economic deprivation, opportunity structure, and robbery victimization: Intra-and interracial patterns. Social Forces, 64, 975-991. Google Scholar | |
| Messner, S. F. , & Tardiff, K. (1986). Economic inequality and levels of homicide: An analysis of urban neighborhoods. Criminology, 24, 297-317. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Miller, W. B. (1958). Lower class culture as a generating milieu of gang delinquency. Journal of Social Issues, 14, 5-19. Google Scholar | |
| Mladenka, K. R. , & Hill, K. Q. (1976). A reexamination of the etiology of urban crime. Criminology, 13, 491-506. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Mullen, B. (1989). Advanced BASIC meta-analysis. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum. Google Scholar | |
| Mullen, B. , & Rosenthal, R. (1985). Basic meta-analysis: Procedures and programs. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum. Google Scholar | |
| Myers, M. A. (1987). Economic inequality and discrimination in sentencing. Social Forces, 65, 746-766. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Nettler, G. (1984). Explaining crime (3rd ed.). New York, NY: McGraw Hill. Google Scholar | |
| Parker, R. , & Horwitz, A. (1986). Unemployment, crime, and imprisonment: A panel approach. Criminology, 24, 751-770. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Parker, R. N. , & Smith, M. D. (1979). Deterrence, poverty, and type of homicide. American Journal of Sociology, 85, 614-624. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Patterson, E. B. (1991). Poverty, income inequality, and community crime rates. Criminology, 29, 755-776. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Peterson, R. D. , & Bailey, W. C. (1988). Forcible rape, poverty, and economic inequality in U.S. metropolitan communities. Journal of Quantitative Criminology, 4, 99-119. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Quetelet, A. (1842). A treatise on man. Edinburgh, Scotland: Chambers. Google Scholar | |
| Quinney, R. , & Wildeman, J. (1991). The problem of crime (3rd ed.). Mountainview, CA: Mayfield Publishing Co. Google Scholar | |
| Ritzer, G. , & Gindoff, P. (1992). Methodological relationism: Lessons for and from social psychology. Social Psychology Quarterly, 55, 128-140. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Rosenfeld, R. (1986). Urban crime rates: Effects of inequality, welfare, dependency, region, and race. In J. M. Byrne & R. J. Sampson (Eds.), The social ecology of crime (pp. 116-129). New York, NY: Springer-Verlag. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Rosenthal, R. (1979). The "file drawer problem" and tolerance for null results. Psychological Bulletin, 86, 638-641. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Rosenthal, R. , & Rubin, D. B. (1982). Comparing effect sizes of independent studies. Psychological Bulletin, 92, 500-504. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Sampson, R. (1985a). Race and criminal violence: A demographically disaggregated analysis of urban homicide. Crime & Delinquency, 31, 47-82. Google Scholar, Link | |
| Sampson, R. (1985b). Structural sources of variation in race-age-specific rates of offending across major U.S. cities. Criminology, 23, 647-673. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Sampson, R. J. , & Castellano, T. C. (1982). Economic inequality and personal victimization. The British Journal of Criminology, 22, 363-385. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Shaw, C. R. , & McKay, H. D. (1942). Juvenile delinquency in urban areas. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. Google Scholar | |
| Simpson, M. E. (1985). Violent crime, income inequality, and regional culture: Another look. Sociological Focus, 18, 199-208. Google Scholar | |
| Smith, M. D. , & Bennett, N. (1985). Poverty, inequality, and theories of forcible rape. Crime and Delinquency, 31, 295-305. Google Scholar, Link | |
| Smith, M. D. , & Parker, R. N. (1980). Type of homicide and variation in regional rates. Social Forces, 59, 136-147. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Tittle, C. R. (1983). Social class and criminal behavior: A critique of the theoretical foundation. Social Forces, 62, 334-358. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Tittle, C. R. , & Meier, R. F. (1990). Specifying the SES/delinquency relationship. Criminology, 28, 271-299. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Tittle, C. R. , Villemez, W. J., & Smith, D. A. (1978). The myth of social class and criminality: An empirical assessment of the empirical evidence. American Sociological Review, 43, 643-656. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Watts, A. D. , & Watts, T. W. (1981). Minorities and urban crime. Urban Affairs Quarterly, 16, 423-436. Google Scholar, Link | |
| Wells, L. E. , & Rankin, J. H. (1991). Families and delinquency: A meta-analysis of the impact of broken homes. Social Problems, 38, 71-93. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Williams, K. R. (1984). Economic sources of homicide: Reestimating the effects of poverty and inequality. American Sociological Review, 49, 283-289. Google Scholar, Crossref, Medline | |
| Williams, K. R. , & Drake, S. (1980). Social structure, crime and criminalization: An empirical examination of the conflict perspective. The Sociological Quarterly, 21, 563-575. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Williams, K. R. , & Flewelling, R. L. (1988). The social production of criminal homicide: A comparative study of disaggregated rates in American cities. American Sociological Review, 53, 421-431. Google Scholar, Crossref | |
| Wilson, J. Q. , & Herrnstein, R. J. (1985). Crime and human nature. New York, NY: Simon & Schuster. Google Scholar | |
| Wolfgang, M. E. (1967). The subculture of violence. London, England: Tavistock Publications. Google Scholar | |
| Zelditch, M. (1991). Levels in the logic of macro-historical explanation. In J. Huber (Ed.), Macro-micro linkages in sociology (pp. 101-106). Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications. Google Scholar |

