RT Article T1 The Long-Term Incarceration Consequences of Coming-of-Age in a Crime Boom JF Journal of quantitative criminology VO 39 IS 4 SP 1003 OP 1025 A1 Bjerk, David A2 Bushway, Shawn LA English YR 2023 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1884549195 AB Objectives We examine the relationship between incarceration rates individuals experience in their thirties and the crime conditions they experienced throughout their youth. Methods We employ a cross state panel data regression design to assess how the crime conditions state/birth-year cohort members experienced from adolescence through their twenties impacts their incarceration rates in their early thirties. Results Birth-year cohorts who experienced higher crime during adolescence had substantially higher incarceration rates in their early thirties than birth-year cohorts in the same state who experienced lower crime during adolescence. By contrast, the crime rates state/birth-year cohorts experienced during their late teens and early twenties have little systematic relationship with their incarceration rates in their thirties. Conclusions The crime conditions individuals are exposed to during adolescence appear to be pivotal with respect to their long-term connections with the criminal justice system. K1 long-term effects K1 Cohort differences K1 panel data K1 Adolescence K1 Crime K1 Incarceration DO 10.1007/s10940-022-09559-4