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Job Training Programs as Crime Deterrents? Evidence from a Low-Income Targeted Training Program RCT

The primary goal of job training programs is to improve employment and earning outcomes of participants. However, effective job training programs may have potential secondary benefits, including in the form of reduced arrests. In this paper, we evaluate the impact of a job training program in New Orleans that was implemented using a randomized controlled trial design. We find that among those who had a prior criminal record, those assigned to the treatment group were two-fifths as likely to get arrested as those assigned to the control group at any time point after randomization. We explore several potential mechanisms for why this effect occurs and find suggestive evidence that the training program’s impact on wages, as well as peer effects from other trainees, can partially explain this effect.

Keywords
job training, RCT, arrests
Education level
Document Object Identifier (DOI)
10.26300/2fn2-xk40
EdWorkingPaper suggested citation:
Anwar, Shamena, Matthew Baird, John Engberg, and Rosanna Smart. (). Job Training Programs as Crime Deterrents? Evidence from a Low-Income Targeted Training Program RCT. (EdWorkingPaper: -543). Retrieved from Annenberg Institute at Brown University: https://doi.org/10.26300/2fn2-xk40

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