New paper out: Immigrant crime in Germany 2012-2015
www.emilkirkegaard.com
Kirkegaard, E. O. W., & Becker, D. (2017). Immigrant crime in Germany 2012-2015. Open Quantitative Sociology & Political Science. Retrieved from https://openpsych.net/paper/50 So the German paper is finally out. As far as I know, this is the most extensive analysis of immigrant crime in Germany. Still, it is a quite simple analysis in some ways. Aside from the usual business of adding yet another replication of country of origin predictive validity, it showed the important fact that while age and sex differences matter for crime rates, the country of origin differences are so large that this does not matter much for the purpose of doing correlations or regressions. It does matter for the absolute differences between countries. See the figure below.
New paper out: Immigrant crime in Germany 2012-2015
New paper out: Immigrant crime in Germany…
New paper out: Immigrant crime in Germany 2012-2015
Kirkegaard, E. O. W., & Becker, D. (2017). Immigrant crime in Germany 2012-2015. Open Quantitative Sociology & Political Science. Retrieved from https://openpsych.net/paper/50 So the German paper is finally out. As far as I know, this is the most extensive analysis of immigrant crime in Germany. Still, it is a quite simple analysis in some ways. Aside from the usual business of adding yet another replication of country of origin predictive validity, it showed the important fact that while age and sex differences matter for crime rates, the country of origin differences are so large that this does not matter much for the purpose of doing correlations or regressions. It does matter for the absolute differences between countries. See the figure below.