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Title: “The New Jim Crow:” Employer Access to Criminal Record Information and Racial Differences in Labor Market Outcomes

Citation Type: Miscellaneous

Publication Year: 2022

Abstract: Having a criminal record and employers having access to that record pose a severe barrier to employment and other beneficial labor market outcomes. Recent research has primarily focused on evaluating Ban-the-Box policies implemented after 2000 that limit employer access to this information in hopes of improving outcomes for people with records. However, the initial labor market consequences of making this information available to employers starting in the 1970s has yet to be studied. In this paper, I use variation in the timing and geography of employers' inaugural access to criminal record information via state central repositories to estimate the e↵ect on labor force participation and employment for various race-gender-education groups. I find that employer access to criminal record information led to decreases in labor force participation and employment of non-college educated black men. However, these declines were primarily o↵set by increases for whites, chiefly white women. For black men, decreases in employment were smaller than decreases in overall labor force participation, which implies that these laws discouraged job seeking among groups most vulnerable to the criminal legal system.

Url: https://scholar.harvard.edu/files/laurenrussell/files/job_market_paper.pdf

User Submitted?: No

Authors: Russell, Lauren

Publisher:

Data Collections: IPUMS CPS

Topics: Crime and Deviance, Labor Force and Occupational Structure, Race and Ethnicity

Countries:

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