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Opportunity, Benefit, and Subjective Disposition - Determinants of Nonprofessional Smuggling

NCJ Number
86042
Journal
Pacific Sociological Review Volume: 24 Issue: 3 Dated: (July 1981) Pages: 299-327
Author(s)
I Paulus; C Simpson
Date Published
1981
Length
29 pages
Annotation
Questionnaire data from border crossers in the Pacific Northwest reveal that about one-half of the sample took 'undeclared goods across an international border.' This study tests determinants of that smuggling behavior and demonstrates the effect of opportunity on law-breaking.
Abstract
More important, the effect of opportunity on behavior depends on subjective disposition toward smuggling, implying the causal ordering that orientation determines behavior. National customs policy, a variable indicating relative benefit from smuggling, also affects smuggling rates, with more Canadians than U.S. residents smuggling. Among subjective determinants, neutralization techniques do affect smuggling, but perceived risk of punishment does not. We concur with others that mala prohibita crimes are not easily deterrable. (Author abstract)