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The Effectiveness of Marriage as an “Intervention” in the Life Course: Evidence from the Netherlands

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Effective Interventions in the Lives of Criminal Offenders

Abstract

Twenty years ago, Sampson and Laub (1993:Crime in the making: pathways and turning points through life. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press) formally presented their age-graded theory of informal social control highlighting the importance of social bonds across the entire life course in understanding pathways into and out of crime. Since then, a large body of research has appeared testing key facets of their theory. One particularly important and well-studied tenet is the notion that key life events hold the potential to redirect lives and foster desistance from crime. In this chapter, we focus on the role of marriage in the life course and review the empirical body of work examining the generalizability of the marriage effect in understanding patterns of persistence and desistance from crime the Netherlands. For a number of substantive and analytic reasons, the Netherlands provides an interesting context to test the generalizability of the marriage effect cross-culturally including its progressive social and political climate. Despite notable differences when compared to the USA, overall results demonstrate that the “good marriage effect” holds in the Netherlands. Men and women, across sociohistorical context and crime type, are less likely to offend when married compared to when not married. The effect is especially pronounced for men who marry a noncriminal spouse though interestingly marriage, irrespective of spousal criminality, is beneficial for female offenders. In short, marriage is an important factor when thinking about pathways out of crime. We conclude this chapter by identifying how the marriage effect can inform criminal justice policy and practice as well as offering up what we see as fruitful avenues for future research.

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Notes

  1. 1.

    Much of the information that follows was published in “Bersani et al. 2009. Marriage and Desistance from Crime in the Netherlands: Do Gender and Socio-Historical Context Matter? Journal of Quantitative Criminology, 25: 3–24.

  2. 2.

    Figure 2 in Bersani et al. (2009), reprinted with permission.

  3. 3.

    Much of the information that follows was published in Schellen et al. (2012).

    “Because You’re Mine I Walk the Line?” Marriage, Spousal Criminality, and Changes in Criminal Offending over

    the Life Course. Journal of Quantitative Criminology 28 (4), 701–723.

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Acknowledgments

We would like to thank John H. Laub and Paul Nieuwbeerta for their helpful comments on this paper. Any errors or omissions are our own.

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Correspondence to Bianca E. Bersani .

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Bersani, B.E., van Schellen, M. (2014). The Effectiveness of Marriage as an “Intervention” in the Life Course: Evidence from the Netherlands. In: Humphrey, J., Cordella, P. (eds) Effective Interventions in the Lives of Criminal Offenders. Springer, New York, NY. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-8930-6_6

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