论文标题
处境不利的社区在多大程度上调解社会援助的依赖?来自瑞典的证据
To What Extent Do Disadvantaged Neighborhoods Mediate Social Assistance Dependency? Evidence from Sweden
论文作者
论文摘要
偶尔的社会援助阻止个人遭受各种社会弊端,尤其是失业和贫困。然而,尚不清楚如何以及在多大程度上持续依赖社会援助导致个人被困在社会援助依赖中。在本文中,我们以累积劣势理论为基础,并研究了在生活过程中积累的社会援助使用是否与未来社会援助的危险相关。我们还分析了在处境不利的社区中构成这种关联解释的重要机制的程度。我们的分析将瑞典人口登记册用于1981年出生的全部人群,这些人受到了大约17年的追踪。尽管大多数研究受到缺乏颗粒状,生活历史数据的限制,但我们的颗粒状个人数据级数据使我们能够应用因果关系分析,从而量化了在社会援助依赖方面最终的可能性的程度,受到弱势社区的影响。我们的发现表明,与在所检查期间从未获得过社会援助相比,在所研究期间,社会援助的积累与未来社会援助的风险比量表的增加相关。然后,我们研究了如何通过长期接触处境不利的社区来介导的社会援助依赖性。我们的结果表明,处境不利的社区的间接效应薄弱至中度。因此,社会援助依赖可能是一个多层次的过程。未来的研究是探索弱势街区的中介作用在不同情况下如何变化。
Occasional social assistance prevents individuals from a range of social ills, particularly unemployment and poverty. It remains unclear, however, how and to what extent continued reliance on social assistance leads to individuals becoming trapped in social assistance dependency. In this paper, we build on the theory of cumulative disadvantage and examine whether the accumulated use of social assistance over the life course is associated with an increased risk of future social assistance recipiency. We also analyze the extent to which living in disadvantaged neighborhoods constitutes an important mechanism in the explanation of this association. Our analyses use Swedish population registers for the full population of individuals born in 1981, and these individuals are followed for approximately 17 years. While most studies are limited by a lack of granular, life-history data, our granular individual-level data allow us to apply causal-mediation analysis, and thereby quantify the extent to which the likelihood of ending up in social assistance dependency is affected by residing in disadvantaged neighborhoods. Our findings show the accumulation of social assistance over the studied period is associated with a more than four-fold increase on a risk ratio scale for future social assistance recipiency, compared to never having received social assistance during the period examined. Then, we examine how social assistance dependency is mediated by prolonged exposure to disadvantaged neighborhoods. Our results suggest that the indirect effect of disadvantaged neighborhoods is weak to moderate. Therefore, social assistance dependency may be a multilevel process. Future research is to explore how the mediating effects of disadvantaged neighborhoods vary in different contexts.