A familiar offence: how households shape juvenile reoffending
Tobias Auer and Tom Kirchmaier
In this paper we focus on how the criminal history of a household affects juvenile reoffending. Using detailed administrative data from Greater Manchester Police for 2007-2018, we construct a matched sample of 15,548 juvenile first-time offenders. We show causally that juveniles from a household with a previous criminal record are 26.4 to 29.8 percentage points more likely to reoffend within three years, with the greatest additional risk being in the first year after the initial offence. We show that social learning, co-offending by siblings, and differential processing contribute to this effect. Our findings highlight household criminality as an important driver of criminal persistence, underscoring the need to move beyond individual-level predictors and address the criminogenic dynamics within the home.
3 November 2025 Paper Number CEPDP2132
Download PDF - A familiar offence: how households shape juvenile reoffending
This CEP discussion paper is published under the centre's Neighbourhoods programme, Crime programme.
This publication comes under the following theme: Causes of crime