Affiliation:
1. Office of Population Research at Princeton University
2. Program in Inequality and Social Policy at Harvard University
3. Princeton University
Abstract
In this article, the authors report the results of a large-scale field experiment conducted in New York City investigating the effects of race and a prison record on employment. Teams of black and white men were matched and sent to apply for low-wage jobs throughout the city, presenting equivalent resumés and differing only in their race and criminal background. The authors find a significant negative effect of a criminal record on employment outcomes that appears substantially larger for African Americans. The sequence of interactions preceding hiring decisions suggests that black applicants are less often invited to interview, thereby providing fewer opportunities to establish rapport with the employer. Furthermore, employers' general reluctance to discuss the criminal record of an applicant appears especially harmful for black ex-offenders. Overall, these results point to the importance of rapport-building for finding work, something that the stigmatizing characteristics of minority and criminal status make more difficult to achieve.
Subject
General Social Sciences,Sociology and Political Science
Reference20 articles.
1. Crocker, Jennifer, Brenda Major, and Claude Steele. 1998. Social stigma. In The handbook of social psychology, ed. D. Gilbert , S. Fiske, and G. Lindzey, 504-53. Boston: McGraw-Hill.
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285 articles.
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