dc.contributorTobón Zapata, Santiago
dc.contributorRodríguez Orgales, Catherine
dc.contributorCamila, Galindo
dc.creatorFajardo Vanegas, Felipe
dc.date.accessioned2023-08-04T20:07:57Z
dc.date.accessioned2023-09-06T23:45:04Z
dc.date.available2023-08-04T20:07:57Z
dc.date.available2023-09-06T23:45:04Z
dc.date.created2023-08-04T20:07:57Z
dc.date.issued2023-05-31
dc.identifierhttp://hdl.handle.net/1992/69275
dc.identifierinstname:Universidad de los Andes
dc.identifierreponame:Repositorio Institucional Séneca
dc.identifierrepourl:https://repositorio.uniandes.edu.co/
dc.identifier.urihttps://repositorioslatinoamericanos.uchile.cl/handle/2250/8726796
dc.description.abstractEn América Latina y el Caribe, el crimen es un fenómeno persistente y costoso en el cual se involucran hombres jovenes, tanto como víctimas como victimarios ¿Por quélos jóvenes de la región se involucran en actividades criminales? En América Latina, no solo las potenciales ganancias del crimen son altas sino que el contexto de desigualdad, inmovilidad social y limitadas oportunidades, hace que para muchos jóvenes las oportunidades legales parezcan una realidad distante. En este contexto, en 2014 se introdujo en Colombia el programa Ser Pilo Paga, que otorgó alrededor de 10,000 becas anuales entre 2014 y 2018 para estudiantes de bajos ingresos y alto desempeño académico ¿Cómo afecta la introducción de un programa que aumentó la posibilidad de obtener educación superior para un grupo de jóvenes de alto desempeño y bajos recursos en Colombia su probabilidad de participación en el crimen? En este trabajo utilizamos la metodología de Regresión Discontinua, que aprovecha un cambio en la probabilidad de acceder a la educación superior según las condiciones de elegibilidad para el programa Ser Pilo Paga. Los resultados presentados son consistentes con que al ingresar a educación superior hay una menor participación en actividades criminales, aunque algunos de estos no son significativos.
dc.languagespa
dc.publisherUniversidad de los Andes
dc.publisherMaestría en Economía
dc.publisherFacultad de Economía
dc.relationM. J. Álvarez-Rivadulla, C. Castro, J. Corredor, J. Londoño-Velez, C. Maldonado, C. Rodriguez, F. Sánchez, T. Velasco, D. Angel, M. C. Ayala, et al. El programa ser pilo paga: Impactos iniciales en equidad en el acceso a la educación superior y el desempeño académico (ser pilo paga educational program: Initial impacts on equity in access to higher education and academic performance). Documento CEDE, (2017-59), 2017.
dc.relationM. J. Álvarez-Rivadulla, A. M. Jaramillo, F. Fajardo, L. Cely, A. Molano, and F. Montes. College integration and social class. Higher Education, 84(3):647-669, 2022.
dc.relationA. Baird. Becoming the ¿baddest¿: Masculine trajectories of gang violence in medellín. Journal of Latin American Studies, 50(1):183-210, 2018. doi: 10.1017/S0022216X17000761.
dc.relationG. S. Becker. Crime and punishment: An economic approach. Journal of political economy, 76(2):169-217, 1968.
dc.relationM. Bergman. More money, more crime: Prosperity and rising crime in Latin America. Oxford University Press, 2018.
dc.relationG. L. Bernal and J. Penney. Scholarships and student effort: Evidence from Colombia's Ser Pilo Paga program. Economics of Education Review, 72:121-130, 2019.
dc.relationR. Bernal and X. Peña. Guía práctica para la evaluación de impacto. Universidad de los Andes, 2011.
dc.relationR. A. Blair and M. Weintraub. Little evidence that military policing reduces crime or improves human security. Nature Human Behaviour, pages 1-13, 2023.
dc.relationC. Blattman, J. C. Jamison, and M. Sheridan. Reducing crime and violence: Experimental evidence from cognitive behavioral therapy in liberia. American Economic Review, 107(4):1165-1206, 2017.
dc.relationC. Blattman, G. Duncan, B. Lessing, and S. Tobón. Gang rule: Understanding and countering criminal governance. Technical report, National Bureau of Economic Research, 2021.
dc.relationF. Calderoni, G. M. Campedelli, A. Szekely, M. Paolucci, and G. Andrighetto. Recruitment into organized crime: An agent-based approach testing the impact of different policies. Journal of Quantitative Criminology, pages 1-41, 2021.
dc.relationS. Calonico, M. D. Cattaneo, and R. Titiunik. Robust data-driven inference in the regression-discontinuity design. The Stata Journal, 14(4):909-946, 2014.
dc.relationV. Canudas-Romo and J. M. Aburto. Youth lost to homicides: disparities in survival in latin America and the Caribbean. BMJ global health, 4(2):e001275, 2019.
dc.relationL. S. Carvalho and R. R. Soares. Living on the edge: Youth entry, career and exit in drug-selling gangs. Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, 121:77-98, 2016.
dc.relationM. D. Cattaneo and R. Titiunik. Regression discontinuity designs. Annual Review of Economics, 14:821-851, 2022.
dc.relationM. D. Cattaneo, M. Jansson, and X. Ma. Manipulation testing based on density discontinuity. The Stata Journal, 18(1):234-261, 2018.
dc.relationM. D. Cattaneo, M. Jansson, and X. Ma. Simple local polynomial density estimators. Journal of the American Statistical Association, 115(531):1449-1455, 2020.
dc.relationM. D. Cattaneo, N. Idrobo, and R. Titiunik. A practical introduction to regression discontinuity designs: Extensions. arXiv preprint arXiv:2301.08958, 2023.
dc.relationCEPAL. Panorama Social de América Latina 2009. Cepal, 2010.
dc.relationCEPAL. Panorama Social de América Latina y el Caribe 2022: la transformación de la educación como base para el desarrollo sostenible. CEPAL, 2022.
dc.relationA. Chalfin and J. McCrary. Criminal deterrence: A review of the literature. Journal of Economic Literature, 55(1):5-48, 2017.
dc.relationD. Collazos, E. García, D. Mejía, D. Ortega, and S. Tobón. Hot spots policing in a high-crime environment: An experimental evaluation in medellin. Journal of Experimental Criminology, 17:473-506, 2021.
dc.relationS. Cunningham. Causal inference: The mixtape. Yale university press, 2021.
dc.relationM. Draca and S. Machin. Crime and economic incentives. Annual Review of Economics, 7(1):389-408, 2015.
dc.relationI. Ehrlich. Participation in illegitimate activities: A theoretical and empirical investigation. Journal of political Economy, 81(3):521-565, 1973.
dc.relationL. Fergusson and S. A. Flórez. Desigualdad educativa en Colombia. la economía política de la persistencia de la desigualdad en educación. In "Educación y clases sociales en Colombia. Un estudio sobre apartheid educativo", pages 99-101. Dejusticia-Centro de estudios de derecho, justicia y sociedad, 2021.
dc.relationM. M. Ferreyra, C. Avitabile, F. H. Paz, et al. At a crossroads: higher education in Latin America and the Caribbean. World Bank Publications, 2017.
dc.relationM. García Villegas, L. Fergusson, and J. C. Cárdenas. La quinta puerta. Ariel Ciencias Sociales. Ariel Colombia, 2021.
dc.relationM.-C. Gómez. Educación y crimen: El impacto de la ampliación de la jornada escolar sobre la criminalidad en Bogotá alrededor de los colegios (education and crime: The impact of longer school days on crime in Bogotá around schools). Documento CEDE, (2019-14), 2019.
dc.relationN. Gómez. Returns to college education in colombia. Higher Education Policy, 35(3):692-708, 2022.
dc.relationJ. Grogger. Market wages and youth crime. Journal of labor Economics, 16(4):756-791, 1998.
dc.relationR. Hjalmarsson, H. Holmlund, and M. J. Lindquist. The effect of education on criminal convictions and incarceration: Causal evidence from micro-data. The Economic Journal, 125(587):1290-1326, 2015.
dc.relationN. Huntington-Klein. The effect: An introduction to research design and causality. CRC Press, 2021.
dc.relationL. Jaitman. Frontiers in the economics of crime: lessons for Latin America and the caribbean. Latin American economic review, 28(1):19, 2019.
dc.relationL. Jaitman, D. Caprirolo, R. Granguillhome Ochoa, P. Keefer, T. Leggett, J. A. Lewis, J. A. Mejía-Guerra, M. Mello, H. Sutton, and I. Torre. The costs of crime and violence: New evidence and insights in Latin America and the Caribbean, volume 87. Inter-American Development Bank Washington, DC, 2017.
dc.relationG. Khanna, C. Medina, A. Nyshadham, and J. A. Tamayo. Formal employment and organized crime: Regression discontinuity evidence from colombia. Technical report, National Bureau of Economic Research, 2019.
dc.relationG. Khanna, C. Medina, A. Nyshadham, C. Posso, and J. Tamayo. Job loss, credit, and crime in Colombia. American Economic Review: Insights, 3(1):97-114, 2021.
dc.relationD. S. Kirk and R. J. Sampson. Juvenile arrest and collateral educational damage in the transition to adulthood. Sociology of education, 86(1):36-62, 2013.
dc.relationR. Laajaj, A. Moya, and F. Sánchez. Equality of opportunity and human capital accumulation: Motivational effect of a nationwide scholarship in colombia. Journal of Development Economics, 154:102754, 2022.
dc.relationL. Lochner. Education, work, and crime: A human capital approach. International Economic Review, 45(3): 811-843, 2004.
dc.relationL. Lochner and E. Moretti. The effect of education on crime: Evidence from prison inmates, arrests, and self-reports. American economic review, 94(1):155-189, 2004.
dc.relationJ. Londoño-Vélez. The impact of diversity on perceptions of income distribution and preferences for redistribution. Journal of Public Economics, 214:104732, 2022.
dc.relationJ. Londoño-Vélez, C. Rodríguez, and F. Sánchez. Upstream and downstream impacts of college merit-based financial aid for low-income students: Ser Pilo Paga in Colombia. American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, 12(2):193-227, 2020.
dc.relationJ. Londoño-Vélez, C. Rodríguez, and F. Sánchez. Impactos de ser pilo paga sobre la graduación y el desempeño universitario. Technical report, Instituto Colombiano para el Fomento de la Educación Superior, 2021.
dc.relationJ. Londoño-Vélez, C. Rodríguez, F. Sánchez, and L. E. Álvarez. Financial aid and social mobility: Evidence from Colombia's Ser Pilo Paga. 2023.
dc.relationS. Machin, O. Marie, and S. Vujic. The crime reducing effect of education. The Economic Journal, 121(552): 463-484, 2011.
dc.relationOECD. Broken Social Elevator?: How to Promote Social Mobility. Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), 2018.
dc.relationD. Ortega, D. Mejía, and K. Ortiz. Un análisis de la criminalidad urbana en Colombia. 2015.
dc.relationH. A. Patrinos and G. Psacharopoulos. Returns to education in developing countries. In The Economics of education, pages 53-64. Elsevier, 2020.
dc.relationS. F. Reardon and J. P. Robinson. Regression discontinuity designs with multiple rating-score variables. Journal of research on Educational Effectiveness, 5(1):83-104, 2012.
dc.relationA. Rettberg. Violencia en América Latina hoy: manifestaciones e impactos. Revista de Estudios Sociales, (73): 2-17, 2020.
dc.relationE. K. Rose, J. T. Schellenberg, and Y. Shem-Tov. The effects of teacher quality on adult criminal justice contact. Technical report, National Bureau of Economic Research, 2022.
dc.relationE. Schargrodsky and L. Freira. Inequality and crime in latin america and the caribbean: New data for and old question. 2021
dc.relationC. Strocka. Youth gangs in Latin America. The SAIS Review of International Affairs, 26(2):133-146, 2006.
dc.relationM. M. Sviatschi. Making a narco: Childhood exposure to illegal labor markets and criminal life paths. Econometrica, 90(4):1835-1878, 2022.
dc.relationF. L. Tamayo-Arboleda and E. Norza-Céspedes. Midiendo el crimen: cifras de criminalidad y operatividad policial en Colombia, 2017. Revista Criminalidad, 60(3):73-93, 2018.
dc.relationJ. Tenjo, O. Álvarez, A. Gaviria Jaramillo, M. C. Jiménez, et al. Evolution of returns to education in Colombia (1976-2014). 2017.
dc.relationT. P. Thornberry, D. Huizinga, and R. Loeber. Juvenile justice-causes and correlates: Findings and implications. Juvenile Justice Journal, 9(1):3-19, 2004.
dc.relationD. Trucco. Educación y desigualdad en América latina. 2014.
dc.relationUNODC. Global study on homicide. United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. 2019.
dc.relationS. Urzúa. The economic impact of higher education. M., Ferreyra, C., Avitabile, J., Botero Álvarez, F., Haimovich Paz, & S., Urzúa, At a crossroads: higher education in Latin America and the Caribbean. Washington DC: The World Bank, 2017.
dc.relationJ. P. Valenzuela and N. Yánez. Trayectoria y políticas de inclusión en educación superior en América Latina y el caribe en el contexto de la pandemia: dos décadas de avances y desafíos. 2022.
dc.relationM. G. Villegas and L. G. Estrada. Ensayo sobre historia política de la educación en columbia. In Educación y clases sociales en Colombia. Un estudio sobre apartheid educativo, pages 37-71. Dejusticia-Centro de estudios de derecho, justicia y sociedad, 2021.
dc.relationA. O. Widdowson, S. E. Siennick, and C. Hay. The implications of arrest for college enrollment: An analysis of long-term effects and mediating mechanisms. Criminology, 54(4):621-652, 2016.
dc.relationV. C. Wong, P. M. Steiner, and T. D. Cook. Analyzing regression-discontinuity designs with multiple assignment variables: A comparative study of four estimation methods. Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 38(2):107-141, 2013.
dc.relationD. Zarruk, C. Rodríguez, A. M. Ibánez, et al. Crime, punishment, and schooling decisions: Evidence from Colombian adolescents. Technical report, Inter-American Development Bank, 2013.
dc.rightshttps://repositorio.uniandes.edu.co/static/pdf/aceptacion_uso_es.pdf
dc.rightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
dc.rightshttp://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_abf2
dc.titleIgualdad de oportunidades y crimen: El efecto de Ser Pilo Paga en la incidencia de actividades criminales
dc.typeTrabajo de grado - Maestría


Este ítem pertenece a la siguiente institución