Abstract
Abstract
Objectives
To examine the short-term effects of admission requirements for upper secondary vocational education and training (VET) on enrollment and criminal offending among academically low-achieving boys.
Methods
We apply multi-group difference-in-differences models to full population data and analyze an educational policy reform in Denmark (N = 60,759).
Results
The reform caused a 16 percentage points lower enrollment in VET among academically low-achieving boys, and their risk of being charged with a crime increased by up to two percentage points 9 months after the end of compulsory school. However, after 12 months, the effect on criminal charges disappeared.
Conclusion
In the education-crime nexus, educational enrollment in upper secondary education is an understudied margin, which has important implications for both scholars and policy-makers. Limitations include the short follow-up period and that the analyses examine effects for boys only.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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