“…and Monitoring the Future (Staff, Osgood, et al, 2010;; with population birth cohorts (Thornberry and Christenson, 1984;Williams and Sickles, 2002;Witte and Tauchen, 1994); in follow-up studies of incarcerated individuals (Laub and Sampson, 2003;Sampson and Laub, 1993;Witte, 1980); among homeless samples (Hagan and McCarthy, 1997); and in randomized evaluations comprising hard-to-employ individuals with arrest histories or prison experience (Cook et al, 2015;Uggen, 2000;Uggen and Thompson, 2003). This finding has also been replicated in a variety of non-U.S. settings (Blokland and Nieuwbeerta, 2005;Farrington et al, 1986;Hagan, 1993;Savolainen, 2009;Van der Geest, Bijleveld, and Blokland, 2011;Verbruggen et al, 2015). 1 Despite a good deal of evidence showing that work can play an important role in curtailing criminal behavior, surprisingly little is known about the mechanisms through which work lowers individual involvement in crime, especially among serious offenders.…”