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Sociological Spectrum

Mid-South Sociological Association
Volume 36, 2016 - Issue 2
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Original Articles

A cohort analysis of employment status and homicide victimization in the United States

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ABSTRACT

The purpose of the study was to examine the impact of employment status on homicide victimization among cohort members. Data were derived from the US National Longitudinal Mortality Study. Cox proportional hazards regression models were fitted to the data. Analysis showed that employment status was significantly associated with homicide. The unemployed were over 50% more likely to become homicide victims than the employed. Persons not in the labor force were 1.3 times more likely to be victimized than employed cohort members. Results also showed that race was significantly associated with homicide. Non-Hispanic Blacks were over 4.5 times as likely to die as whites. Hispanics were nearly 1.9 times as likely to be victims as Non-Hispanic whites. When the sample was stratified by race/ethnicity, unemployment was highly significant for both non-Hispanic white and non-Hispanic African American men. Employment status is a significant risk factor for homicide victimization.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Augustine J. Kposowa

Augustine J. Kposowa is Professor of Sociology at the University of California, Riverside. His present research emphases are in social epidemiology, especially violent victimization, health demography, political sociology, and quantitative methodology. Recent works have appeared in Social Psychiatry & Psychiatric Epidemiology, Social Science and Medicine, British Journal of Medicine & Medical Research, and also the International Journal of Infectious Diseases.

Karin A. C. Johnson

Karin A. C. Johnson received her M.A. in International Affairs from the American University of Paris, where she specialized in comparative politics and public policy. She is an Associate Researcher at the Laboratory for Comparative Social Research at the Higher School of Economics, in Moscow, Russia, and a graduate student in the Department of Sociology at the University of California, Riverside. Her current research interests are in political economy, high-skilled migration, international labor market, education inequality, and public policy.
 

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