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The Civic Voluntarism of “Custodial Citizens”: Involuntary Criminal Justice Contact, Associational Life, and Political Participation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 August 2018

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Abstract

A growing body of research explores the influence of involuntary criminal justice contact on political participation, demonstrating that all types of contact weaken political participation. We posit, however, that personal connections to civil society organizations (CSOs) moderate the negative effects of involuntary criminal justice contact on political participation, particularly political activism beyond registering to vote and voting. We test this proposition with individual-level and aggregate-level data from metropolitan and municipal Chicago. Our findings confirm a paradox of participation by custodial citizens. One, we demonstrate positive, statistically significant, and substantive effects of personal connections to CSOs on nonvoting political participation by custodial citizens. Two, the negative effects of involuntary criminal justice contact on voting participation among individuals and communities may endure, despite personal connections to CSOs, even in a state where the franchise is restored immediately after incarceration. Our study suggests that an associational account of political participation deepens our understanding of the political behavior of custodial citizens and their communities in the age of mass incarceration.

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Copyright © American Political Science Association 2018 

In the United States, citizens (and immigrant denizens) may experience unwanted, even unwarranted, contact with the criminal justice system. Categories of such criminal justice contactFootnote 1 include police stops of drivers and frisks of pedestrians, arrests without formal charges and convictions, diversion from court convictions via “problem-solving” or specialized courts such as drug courts, and court convictions for misdemeanors and felonies, accompanied by sentences of incarceration, parole, or probation, along with the imposition of fees and fines by the courts.Footnote 2 Criminal justice contact also includes unwanted interactions between youth and “resource officers” (i.e., police working in elementary and secondary schools), arrests and detentions of youth in juvenile or adult correctional facilities, and community supervision by and beyond “youth diversion programs.”Footnote 3 The myriad of moments for unwanted contact between citizens and the criminal justice system in the United States multiplies membership in the group scholars call “custodial citizens.”Footnote 4 They are the growing set of citizens law enforcement agencies have detained for questioning, arrested, charged, convicted, or placed under some form of correctional control for suspicion of or actual criminal behavior.

The number and rate of Americans who are custodial citizens are great, even as violent and property crime rates fall and public punitiveness abates.Footnote 5 There are 110,235,200 people in the criminal history files of the 50 states and U.S. territories, an increase of 130% from 1993.Footnote 6 Nearly one in every three adults has a record of criminal arrest.Footnote 7 While approximately 9% of adults have felony convictions, we generally know that the percentage of adults with misdemeanor convictions is many times larger.Footnote 8 Nearly one in 34 Americans is under some form of correctional control.Footnote 9 Millions of adults and juveniles who were once under correctional control for criminal convictions are now “off paper” but not necessarily fully (re)integrated into society.

Even when citizens are no longer in the unwanted grasp of carceral government, deep imprints of their criminal justice contact remain. Law enforcement agencies retain custody of, often publicize, and may permit others to monetize all information about criminal justice contact, whether slight or severe. It is contained in a vast assortment of “criminal intelligence databases, police blotters, rap sheets, court records, presentence reports, prosecutors’ files, probation files, and jail and prison databases,” inclusive of photographs and residential addresses.Footnote 10 Thus, the half-life of criminal justice contact is immeasurable. Its effects, however, are not.

Custodial citizenship, whether from short detentions for questioning at police departments and county jails to long stretches in state or federal prisons, produces a range of negative social and labor effects for those who have had criminal justice contact. They include stigma, depression, lost earnings, unemployment, and homelessness.Footnote 11 Custodial citizenship also has concomitant negative consequences for the children and families of the citizens whom law enforcement agencies have detained for questioning, arrested, charged, convicted, or placed under some form of correctional control. Examples include weakened family ties and increased behavioral problems for children.Footnote 12 Custodial citizenship may even have negative effects on communities with greater residential densities of such citizens, measured for instance by residential churn, social control, and crime.Footnote 13

What about the polis and politics? Custodial citizenship affects government and governance at every rung of the federalist ladder. It shapes the demographics and decisions of the legislative, executive, and judicial branches of localities, states, and the nation.Footnote 14 It influences legislative reapportionment and redistricting;Footnote 15 juries and electorates;Footnote 16 political candidacies;Footnote 17 vote margins in elections and referendums;Footnote 18 distributive politics (e.g. siting of prisons and allocation of some intergovernmental transfers);Footnote 19 mundane matters of public policy (e.g., measuring labor force participation and unemployment);Footnote 20 and municipal revenue, particularly when city managers, police, and courts collude for exploitative revenue.Footnote 21

Furthermore, custodial citizenship is consequential to civic voluntarism by adults, particularly political participation.Footnote 22 As criminal justice contact increases, intensifies, and lengthens at the individual and community levels, scholars generally observe that custodial citizens and communities with residential concentrations of them participate less in political activities, especially voting.Footnote 23 Declines in voting by custodial citizens and their communities are not a function of imprisonment and felony disenfranchisement alone. Citizens who police officers have detained for questioning, for instance, report voting less, too.Footnote 24 Because criminal justice contact reduces the number of people participating as voters, as well as possessing positive civic sentiments,Footnote 25 it is “an important force in shaping American mass politics.”Footnote 26

Rightly, scholars of political behavior, institutions, and normative theory focus on the existence, size, and causal mechanisms of the negative democratic effects of custodial citizenship.Footnote 27 The study of the civic consequences of criminal justice contact is valuable—theoretically, empirically, and substantively. It increases, in particular, our understanding of the anti-democratic consequences of custodial citizenship for political attitudes and behaviors. It brings into better focus the “second face of the American state,” revealing the punitive profile of “the governing institutions and officials that exercise social control and encompass various modes of coercion, containment, repression, surveillance, regulation, predation, discipline, and violence” that condition civic voluntarism while influencing other political phenomena.Footnote 28 Nonetheless, as important, we argue, is the need to identify the set of factors that may attenuate the negative influence of “the state’s more controlling ‘second face’”Footnote 29 on civic voluntarism.

While the study of the negative democratic effects of criminal justice contact invites an assortment of scholarly interventions, we widen here the disciplinary lens of the politics of criminal punishment to give greater attention to civil society. This is necessary. Deliberate consideration of civil society is atypical for political penologists interested in the democratic consequences of the American carceral state. Scholars of punishment and politics—be they Americanists, normative theorists, or comparatists—tend to neglect the potential and limits of civil society organizations (CSOs) to influence political participation by custodial citizens.Footnote 30 Even when they do not neglect civil society, studies of the relationship between criminal justice contact and political behavior and attitudes are limited. For example, they overemphasize “ex-felon serving institutions,” which likely lack capacity for political mobilization.Footnote 31 Yet there is reason to suspect that civil society and a variety of CSOs may mitigate the negative effects of criminal justice contact on civic voluntarism.

A large body of scholarship exists about the potential of CSOs to shape political behavior through civic skills development, community organizing, services provision, and opportunities for activism and mobilization, inclusive of participation.Footnote 32 We leverage it to deduce a proposition about how and why personal connections to CSOs may positively influence political participation by adult custodial citizens, just as personal connections to CSOs routinely do for adult noncustodial citizens.Footnote 33 Taking what Han calls “an organizational approach to understanding [political] activism”Footnote 34 and applying it to custodial citizens, we explore whether personal connections to one set of varied CSOs—formal, tax-exempt nonprofit organizations—are associated with weaker negative effects (or positive ones) of criminal justice contact on political participation. We employ individual-level data from metropolitan Chicago on criminal justice contact, connections to CSOs, and participation and aggregate data on conviction rates, CSO densities, and political participation (i.e., voting and citizen-initiated contact with government) in municipal Chicago. Our data permit us to estimate relationships among custodial citizenship, civil society, and political forms of civic voluntarism.

Four findings are key: 1) independent of personal connections to CSOs, criminal justice contact is neither associated with voting nor non-voting; 2) custodial citizens without connections to CSOs participate less in politics via voting and nonvoting; 3) personal connections to CSOs are associated with increased nonvoting political participation among those who have had the heaviest criminal justice contact (i.e., correctional control via incarceration and community supervision); and 4) however, personal connections to CSOs may only increase some forms of political participation among custodial citizens.

Criminal Justice Contact and Political Participation

People, as the aphorism states, “participate when they can, when they want to, and when they are asked.”Footnote 35 Resources, orientations, and recruitment, along with “rewards, interests, and beliefs,” influence political participation.Footnote 36 Institutions and policies affect political participation, too. As Mettler and SossFootnote 37 stress, “living under a given policy regime affects citizens’ goals, beliefs, and identities—and hence, the possibilities and limits for future political action.” However, individual-level factors associated with the likelihood of criminal justice contact build resource, efficacy, and recruitment barriers to political participation by custodial citizens. Also, the American carceral regime, buttressed primarily by white public support for punitive policies,Footnote 38 including policies that exclude custodial citizens from the ballot box and public office, supplemented by punitive polices that the state, market, and civil society coproduce,Footnote 39 prevents many custodial citizens from thinking and behaving as full political members of society. It is unsurprising then that research on the democratic effects of the American carceral state draws the same conclusion as scholarship on the democratic effects of the American welfare state—“some policies draw citizens into public life and others induce passivity.”Footnote 40

Aside from executing the administration of public safety and criminal corrections, criminal justice contact as a “political learning situation”Footnote 41 for custodial citizens negatively affects the political attitudes, ambitions, and activities of many custodial citizens, arguably by socializing them to see themselves as citizens with less liberty, equality, dignity, and regard than other citizens.Footnote 42 Additionally, scholars observe that the relationship between criminal justice contact and electoral participation, particularly voting, is negative and the negative relationship strengthens as the grasp of criminal justice contact tightens.Footnote 43 The most cited empirical study of the political attitudes and behavior of custodial citizens in the United States, for instance, estimates the likelihood of decline in voting by persons with arrests as 7%, criminal convictions as 10%, short stints in jail or prison as 17%, and long stints of incarceration at almost one-third.Footnote 44 Furthermore, in communities where the residential density of custodial citizens is higher and where more residents are removed from them through imprisonment as “coercive mobility”Footnote 45 voting is lower, too.Footnote 46

Yet even when we observe that custodial citizens participate electorally at lower levels than their noncustodial counterparts, their probabilities of voting or participating politically in other ways are never zero. Additionally, some custodial citizens “double down on democratic values and practices,”Footnote 47 despite punitive policy designs and negative feedback of the carceral state.Footnote 48 Acting as if their political participation matters and to make it so, many custodial citizens participate, defying low expectations of collective action improving their lives.Footnote 49 Furthermore, criminal justice contact may reduce voting without affecting other political activities (e.g., contacting government officials, signing petitions, and demonstrating).Footnote 50 Plus, because elections are infrequent and often noncompetitive—limiting their service as a strong means of democratic accountability and civic engagement—custodial citizens, like noncustodial ones, could perceive participation outside the voting booth as a better means for sharing preferences with policymakers and for achieving policy responsiveness than participation in elections. And some people prefer to participate via nonvoting political activities instead of by electoral ones.Footnote 51 Therefore, borrowing Han’s caution about political activism by noncustodial citizens, generally, when it comes to our knowledge about the political participation of custodial citizens, “we cannot assume that findings related to voting import directly to other forms of activism.”Footnote 52

Civil Society Organizations and Custodial Citizens

Civil society is “the primary agent of political dialogue and citizen influence” when people participate politically in the United States, particularly in cities and metropolitan areas.Footnote 53 It has been since the nineteenth-century travels of Alexis de Tocqueville, who was one of the first empiricists of civil society and criminal justice contact in America.Footnote 54 CSOs, as de Tocqueville observed then, pave the way for political participation. It is truer in the twenty-first century, where “every day thousands of nonprofit organizations around the country are busy organizing and creating opportunities for new associations” for individual and collective efficacy to solve public problems by (and beyond) voting and nonvoting political participation.Footnote 55

Civil Society Organizations as Hindrances to Participation

Although we expect CSOs to positively affect the political participation of custodial citizens connected to them, reasons exist to be pessimistic about their influence. There has been a steady growth in the number of charitable nonprofit organizations and nonprofit advocacy organizations, which often do not mobilize clients and rely little on memberships to advance their interests. The growth of CSOs focused on charitable purposes and without mass memberships (e.g., American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals or the American Civil Liberties Union) shrinks stores of social capital for conversion to political capital.Footnote 56 Such organizations “focus on maximizing the number of people involved without developing their capacity for civic action.”Footnote 57 It likely undermines the political utility of CSOs for citizens,Footnote 58 be they custodial or noncustodial.

Also, custodial citizens, generally, are likely to reach out to and be contacted by social services CSOs that focus on meeting immediate needs (e.g., shelter, substance abuse recovery, employment).Footnote 59 Such organizations seek to support their own persistence first and foremost. Fearing that mobilization of clients could negatively affect their finances, and misunderstanding government regulations of political activities by nonprofits, social services CSOs tend to avoid politics, limiting their level of political engagement.Footnote 60

Even when CSOs foster political engagement, many bias their mobilization. CSOs tend to target individuals who demonstrate greater activismFootnote 61 and who possess more positive social constructions and political capital.Footnote 62 Given the central tendencies of the racial and class demographics of custodial citizens, the political strategies of many CSOs disregard custodial citizens and their communities, preferring to mobilize the less marginalized.Footnote 63

Civil Society Organizations as Pathways to Participation

Those realities notwithstanding, it is plausible that civil society positively affects the participation of custodial citizens. Political participation has associational anchors and “organizational roots” in civil society.Footnote 64 Routine functions and incentives of charities, associations, and other forms of CSOs strengthen the anchors and roots for political participation.Footnote 65 Moreover, many CSOs engage in a variety of activities consequential for the political behavior of clients, volunteers, members, and other stakeholders (figure 1).Footnote 66

Figure 1 Civil society organizations pave ways for political participation

Many CSOs, inclusive of many faith-based/religious CSOs like black churchesFootnote 67 and secular CSOs like labor unions, educate, train, and socialize individuals for political participation.Footnote 68 They teach people to develop opinions and perceive their interests, form group consciousness and identify shared grievances, speak their concerns, and amplify their voices.Footnote 69 They cultivate personal commitments to public issues and collective problem solving.Footnote 70 They help individuals develop political efficacy, education, and civic skills for participation. Political engagement by individuals connected to charitable CSOs can increase from their participation in the “ordinary and routine” practices and activities of the organizations—“activity that has nothing to do with politics or public issues, can develop organizational and communications skills that are relevant for politics and thus can facilitate political activity.”Footnote 71 For instance, the one-on-one conversations, opportunities for public speaking, and collective problem solving of sacred and secular CSOs influence civic development, even when they are indirectly political.Footnote 72 As a result, connections to CSOs by custodial citizens should reduce barriers to participation, including resource, efficacy, and recruitment barriers.Footnote 73

Beyond dispositional and institutional reasons, people participate politically because others recruit and mobilize them,Footnote 74 and CSOs can channel people into opportunities for political participation. Personal connections to CSOs increase the likelihood that “political leaders” will attempt to mobilize them for political influence: “First, organizations mobilize their own members, often explicitly . . . . Second, organizations expose their members to mobilization by sympathetic politicians, activists, and other organizations.”Footnote 75 Thus, CSOs create bridges that connect the civic and the political spheres, which can positively affect resources, orientations, and recruitment for political participation through mobilization.Footnote 76 Hence, “people who belong to associations are more likely to be mobilized and more likely to participate than people who do not belong.”Footnote 77 As well, some CSOs are capable of activating and mobilizing clients, constituents, and members for political participation because of “reciprocal service provision” that produces patron/client relationships that benefit organizations, their clients, and even political elites.Footnote 78

Evidence is strong and consistent that CSOs, even human services CSOs, can inform, activate, and mobilize marginalized people. CSOs help them overcome the greater resource, efficacy, and recruitment barriers to participation that they face relative to people who are not marginalized.Footnote 79 The provision and shaping of routine opportunities for engagement often allow CSOs to demonstrate that collective action produces symbolic and substantive rewards for marginalized people.Footnote 80 Accordingly, civic voluntarism among lower SES individuals is higher in communities with more and stronger CSOs than in neighborhoods with fewer and weaker ones.Footnote 81

Furthermore, CSOs are central to social welfare delivery in communities with high rates of custodial citizens. Again, it is unusual for human services CSOs to explicitly emphasize political action and mobilization. Nevertheless, some CSOs deliberately enable custodial citizens to develop and practice political resistance.Footnote 82 Moreover, some CSOs exist to politically activate and mobilize custodial citizens and their communities.Footnote 83 They provide custodial citizens with a greater sense of civic and political worth for fostering “new citizenship” and political participation through associational life (see figure 2).Footnote 84

Figure 2 Redeeming citizenship by/for people with criminal justice contact

Photo credit: Michael Leo Owens

In sum, CSOs can perform multiple roles that bear on political participation. From fostering group consciousness, solidarity, and social capital to spending resources to influencing elections, CSOs can develop the democratic capacities, sentiments, and activities of citizens, custodial or otherwise. Accordingly, there are more reasons than not to expect that personal connections between custodial citizens and CSOs mitigate—and possibly reverse—the negative effects of criminal justice contact on political participation by custodial citizens. Therefore, we predict that custodial citizens with personal connections to CSOs are more likely to participate by voting and nonvoting political activities than custodial citizens without personal connections to CSOs.

Data, Measures, and Methods

We test our prediction about the influence of criminal justice contact and CSOs on the political participation of custodial citizens with individual and aggregate-level data from the Chicago metropolitan area. Chicago is more alike than different from many major metropolitan areas and central cities. “Chicago is not absolutely average, to be sure . . . . But Chicago has faced the dynamics that have confronted old major cities in the country—growth, decline, crime, and boom times. In this sense Chicago [is] both unique and broadly representative, grounded in a thoroughly documented history and context that helps us understand key patterns.”Footnote 85 Moreover, trends in criminal justice contact in Illinois and Chicago “are broadly consistent with trends in crime and incarceration throughout the United States.”Footnote 86

Illinois is neither high nor low regarding correctional control: The rate of adults incarcerated, paroled, or on probation is 1:38, placing Illinois thirty-fourth among the fifty states. Chicago, its key metropolitan area and central city, has a large subpopulation of custodial citizens and is the primary destination for the return of persons released from correctional institutions, inclusive of the local Cook County Jail. For instance, of the approximately 39,000 people annually released from prison in Illinois, 51% of them reside in the city of Chicago, mainly in seven of 77 neighborhoods, marked by “concentrated disadvantage” in terms of poverty and unemployment rates.Footnote 87

Additionally, restrictions on voting by people under correctional control via prison, jail, parole, or probation with felony convictions in Chicago are comparable to those covering custodial citizens in most metropolitan areas (and states) in the United States. Under Illinois law, custodial citizens are only disenfranchised while incarcerated. Like those in fifteen other states and the District of Columbia, custodial citizens in Chicago who are on parole or probation (i.e., most Chicagoans under correctional control) may vote. Custodial citizens in Illinois may vote, too, while awaiting trial, be they jailed or bonded.

Most important, because of the 2014 Chicago Area Study (CAS), there is adequate survey data permitting estimates of the relationship among criminal justice contact, personal connections to CSOs, and political participation. The CAS, which our online appendix details, surveyed 1,294 respondents, including an oversample of blacks and Latinos, living in the central city and suburbs of metropolitan Chicago.Footnote 88 Of course, we know the statistical limits of self-reported data relative to strengths of administrative data on criminal justice contact and political participation.Footnote 89 We lack the latter, however, for Chicago or Illinois, particularly for measures of personal connections to CSOs and participation beyond registering to vote and voting.

In addition to the CAS, we collected aggregate data on criminal justice contact, CSOs, and political participation in the city of Chicago at the level of neighborhood beats of the Chicago Police Department. We matched a set of measures of criminal justice contact, CSO density, and voting and nonvoting political participation to each police beat. Police beats, which are our units of supplemental analysis (N = 270), allowed us to leverage an important form of nonvoting political participation in Chicago, namely attendance at police beat meetingsFootnote 90 (and to address concerns about selection and response bias associated with surveys like the CAS).Footnote 91

Generally, Chicago is a city of public meetings, as is true of many cities.Footnote 92 In particular, it is a city that uses public meetings as vehicles for citizen contact with government officials. The police beat meetings of the Chicago Alternative Policing Strategy (CAPS) are one important set of meetings in Chicago.Footnote 93 At least 53,000 police beat meetings were held from 1995 through 2016, with total annual attendance ranging from 21,000 to approximately 60,000 people.Footnote 94 The meetings occur at least once each quarter, offering residents opportunities for face-to-face interaction with law enforcement and other government officials, where they make requests related to policing and other municipal services. The meetings allow municipal agencies and citizens to collaborate to coproduce improved police-community relations and greater public safety. “With the exception of elections, it is difficult to identify a municipal activity of any kind attracting similar levels of civic participation—anywhere in the country.”Footnote 95 Furthermore, “Chicago’s policing program has helped to even out the opportunities to participate in community governments, with the greatest increase in collective participation by African-Americans.”Footnote 96

CAS Survey—Criminal Justice Contact and Personal Connections to Civil Society Organizations

Our key independent variables are criminal justice contact and personal connections to CSOs. Our measures of criminal justice contact come from a CAS question: We are interested in how much contact people have had with the police. In the past five years, have you . . . (please select all that apply)—been questioned by the police for any reason, been on probation or parole, served time in jail and/or prison. Eleven percent of respondents indicated that the police had questioned them and five percent reported being under correctional control in the past. We model self-reported levels of criminal justice contact in the past five years with dummy variables (Yes = 1, 0 = No) for detained (i.e., questioned by the police) and correctional control (i.e., prison, parole, or probation). The CAS data do not permit a refined assessment of the length of time either under correctional control or length of time since criminal justice contact.

The CAS queried respondents about their personal connections to CSOs: Some people participate in groups and organizations while others do not. Do you currently belong to, volunteer with, attend meetings of, or pay dues for any of the following types of groups? Types of groups included: (1) religious group; (2) neighborhood or community organization; (3) labor union; (4) a professional organization; (5) an ethnic/cultural organization; (6) political organization that focuses on a specific cause; (7) political party; (8) civic organization (e.g., Rotary Club); (9) other; and (10) none of these. Initially, we coded the types of CSOs that respondents identified having personal connections to into six dummy variables: religious, community, ethnic, labor, political, and other. We tested the independent effects of these dichotomous variables. Ultimately, we exclude them because the CAS provided insufficient data for rigorous tests and robust results. Consequently, our measure of personal CSO connections is a dichotomous variable, measuring personal or direct participation in any type of group (Yes = 1, No = 0). Forty-two percent of respondents reported connections to CSOs. Although we know that higher levels of personal involvement in organizations produce greater personal involvement “in governmental politics” and other arenas of political participation such as elections,Footnote 97 the CAS did not measure the degree of personal involvement in CSOs.

We use two measures of voting from the CAS—whether a respondent was registered to vote and whether they reported voting in the 2012 presidential election. Among registered voters in the CAS, 89% reported voting in 2012.Footnote 98 We measure nonvoting political participation by self-reports of seven political activities, inclusive of a few electoral activities besides voting, respondents performed within 12 months prior to the survey: (1) signed a petition; (2) shared political information via social media; (3) attended a protest; (4) wrote a letter to an elected official; (5) donated to a political cause; (6) volunteered for a political campaign; or (7) issued a political opinion publicly in the form of an op-ed or calling into a radio show. We scaled the items, creating a conventional nonvoting political participation index. It ranges from zero to seven, with a mean of 1.53 activities.Footnote 99 The variety of activities in our index raises the possibility that one activity (e.g., protesting) drives observed relationships between criminal justice contact and nonvoting political participation. To evaluate the appropriateness of the use of the index we model the independent effects of each type of criminal justice contact and CSO connections on each item in the index. Figure 3 displays the marginal effects.

Figure 3 Marginal effects of criminal justice contact on participation

Notes: The figure reflects the marginal effect of correctional control, being detained by the police, and CSO connections on each item in the nonvoting participation index. Coefficients reflect fully specified models, located in tables A6 and A7 of the online appendix.

There is no evidence that correctional control negatively correlates with any item in the nonvoting political participation index. Instead, we observe that criminal justice contact positively correlates with contacting a government official, volunteering, and donating money to a cause. It is otherwise unrelated to nonvoting political participation. Figure 3 also does not reveal that any one activity or type of activity underlies a positive association between police detentions for questioning and nonvoting political participation. Finally, figure 3 illustrates that CSO connections statistically increase participation in all activities but one—sharing opinions on TV, radio, or in a newspaper. Given the general absence of a pattern of criminal justice contact affecting nonvoting political participation, we retain the seven-item scale as our measure of political participation beyond voting and registering to vote.

We control for race, gender, age, education, income, political interest, efficacy, party identification, marriage, and unemployment. The CAS stratified its sample by race. It did not stratify by other characteristics co-occurring with criminal justice contact (e.g., income and education). There may be an underrepresentation of respondents with criminal justice contact because of under-sampling some subpopulations or respondents concealing criminal justice contact. To mitigate potential data biases arising from sampling error, we apply weights to the CAS data where possible, using U.S. Census Bureau estimates of the demographics of the Chicago metropolitan area.Footnote 100

Aggregate Data—Criminal Justice Contact and Density of Civil Society Organizations

We rely on a unique set of public records of criminal convictions to measure criminal justice contact at the community level. Our data from the Chicago Justice Project (CJP), originally collected by the Office of the Chief Judge of the Circuit Court of Cook County (CCCC), includes records of criminal convictions and sentences by the Criminal Division of the CCCC between 2005 and 2009.Footnote 101 The records are cases the State’s Attorney brought against 173,204 individuals it charged with felonies. For our measure and analysis, we retained felony conviction records for residents of the city of Chicago, relying on physical home address the court provided for each defendant. We successfully geocoded 90% of the 42,200 cases in the dataset (N=37,980). We corrected for an extremely right-skewed raw rate of felony convictions by logging conviction rates (log(Convictions)).Footnote 102

We also measure density of CSOs at the community level, which somewhat parallels or proxies for personal connections to CSOs. Extant research on civil society, especially in Chicago, tells us important things about the measure, beyond the fact that it is an indicator of the organizational foundation and milieu of communities.Footnote 103 First, CSO densities are relatively stable by decade. Second, CSO density is positively correlated with events for civic engagement and action, especially “charity events, community festivals, public meetings, recreational activities, and workshops,” and political protests and rallies.Footnote 104 Third, CSO density is a strong predictor of the propensity of “collective action” in or by neighborhoods in Chicago.Footnote 105

We constructed our CSO density measure from the Exempt Organizations Business Master File ExtractsFootnote 106 of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). The IRS identifies all active, tax-exempt, CSOs in the United States with annual incomes greater than $25,000 that are registered with the federal government and are required to file annual financial disclosure reports. Also, the IRS dataset classifies all nonprofit organizations by missions, describes the types of services they provide, and identifies their physical addresses. We chose all CSOs operating in Chicago that the IRS categorized as 501(c)(3), 501(c)(4), 501(c)(5), 501(c)(7), and 501(c)(9) nonprofit organizations (N=13,932).Footnote 107 We aggregated CSOs to police beats, standardizing counts by rates of CSOs per 1,000 people. Like the convictions data, densities of CSOs skewed rightward,Footnote 108 requiring logging CSO densities (log(CSO)).

We use two measures of nonvoting political participation that involve contacting public officials, either of a community or particularistic bent.Footnote 109 The first measure is a multiyear variable of public attendance at police beat meetings, using proprietary CAPS data on the number of civilian attendees per beat per month from 2013 through 2015.Footnote 110 We regard attendance at police beat meetings as an aggregate equivalent of survey items measuring attendance at community or political meetings. We calculated both the mean average attendance across all years by police beat and rates of meeting attendance per 1,000 people. Attendance rates ranged from .55 to 36.2, with a mean of 3.6.

Influenced by a resurgence in the study of nonvoting political participation, particularly citizen-initiated contact with government,Footnote 111 our second measure of contact operationalizes nonvoting political participation by instances of requests for nonemergency services from the city of Chicago via its 24-hour municipal 311 call system.Footnote 112 We treat a 311 call as an analog to the conventional survey measure of contacting a public official. Furthermore, 311 callers demonstrate “custodianship” for the commons, contribute to the maintenance of public goods, and reveal a “civic disposition—that is manifest in a broader pattern of political participation, including behaviors like voting and volunteering.”Footnote 113 Theoretically, variation in criminal justice contact and CSO densities should influence 311 calls. If higher levels of criminal justice contact, for instance, degrade trust in government, whereby less engagement with political life results, eroded trust should diminish the propensity of communities to contact governments to address neighborhood issues.Footnote 114 We geocoded all 311 calls in Chicago in 2014 (N = 584,644) and calculated calls per 1,000 people at the level of police beats. Rates ranged from 1.9 calls to 221.1 calls, averaging 87.5 calls.Footnote 115

Turning to voting participation in the municipality of Chicago, our two measures are turnout by registered voters in the 2014 Illinois general election (2014 voter turnout) and voter turnout in the 2015 mayoral election (2015 voter turnout), derived from electoral precinct-level data from the municipal Board of Election Commissioners. Estimated mean voter turnout for the 2014 election is 47% and 38% for 2015. Descriptive statistics and correlation matrices for all variables in our individual-level and community-level analyses are available from tables A1–A4 of the online appendix.Footnote 116

Empirical Analyses and Results

Individual-Level Analysis

To get a baseline estimate of the relationship between criminal justice contact and political participation, we assess the relationships of criminal justice contact and measures of voting participation and nonvoting participation at the individual level. We would expect, based on extant studies, that voting participation by custodial citizens would be lower than voting participation by noncustodial citizens, with more intense criminal justice contact being associated with greater reductions in voting. The results in table 1 partially support the expectations.

Table 1 Effects of criminal justice contact on political participation

Notes: aWe model registered to vote and voted in 2012 with logistic regression.

b We model nonvoting political participation with Poisson regression. A dispersion test, using the R package “AER,” yielded an estimate of .662, suggesting the data are not burdened by overdispersion.

* p<.05; **p<.01; ***p<.001.

More intense criminal justice contact, measured by correctional control via imprisonment or jailing or community supervision through parole or probation, is negatively associated with individuals being registered to vote and having voted. However, the relationship is not statistically significant. Conversely, and curiously, being detained by the police for questioning is associated with an increased likelihood of voter registration. Yet, like having been under correctional control, we failed to observe any association between police detentions for questioning and voting in 2012.

Turning to the effect of contact on nonvoting participation, we would expect a positive relationship, as most previous studies conclude. As table 1 shows, the results from Chicago partially support the expectation.Footnote 117 Respondents who report that the police had detained them for questioning are likely to have greater levels of nonvoting political participation. The finding confirms results from other studies that show less intense criminal justice contact may increase nonvoting participation.Footnote 118 Yet there is no evidence from Chicago that incarceration and community supervision increase or decrease nonvoting participation. This, too, is relatively consistent with prior research.Footnote 119

So far, we have evidence that criminal justice contact may have varied effects on voting and nonvoting political participation. The positive associations we observe for civic voluntarism through personal connections to CSOs—controlling for other factors, including correctional control—are, however, consistent for voting and nonvoting participation (table 1). The relationship achieves statistical significance across all three models. Personal connections to CSOs are associated with increased participation, as we theorized. This strengthens our expectation that personal connections to CSOs are positively associated with voting and nonvoting political participation by custodial citizens.

Turning our attention to examining the moderating effect of personal connections to CSOs on the political participation of individuals with criminal justice contact, we explore the relationship between criminal justice experiences with personal connections to CSOs. The results in table 2 suggest that personal connections to CSOs correlate with a greater propensity of nonvoting participation by custodial citizens, relative to those with criminal justice contact who lack CSO connections. The interaction of correctional control and personal connections to CSOs produced results that accord with our hypothesis about political participation beyond registering to vote and voting. Personal connections to CSOs are positively related to greater nonvoting political participation by people who have been under correctional control, after controlling for factors that conventionally correlate with civic voluntarism.

Table 2 The interactive effects of contact and CSO connections on forms of participation

Notes: a We model registered to vote and voted in 2012 with logistic regression.

b We model nonvoting political participation with Poisson regression. A dispersion test, using the R package “AER,” yielded an estimate of .660, suggesting an absence of overdispersion.

* p<.05; **p<.01; ***p<.001. Reported coefficients are from fully specified models, located in table A8 of the appendix.

To better interpret the relationships among criminal justice contact, connections to CSOs, and nonvoting political participation, we calculated the expected score on the nonvoting political participation index by degree of criminal justice contact. We did this for custodial citizens with and without connections to CSOs. Regardless of the degree of contact, personal connections to CSOs improve nonvoting participation by custodial citizens relative to those lacking connections to CSOs (figure 4). Absent CSO connections, criminal justice contact diminishes the expected level of nonvoting political participation. Those without criminal justice contact and without CSO connections have an expected score of 1.25 activities on the index. The expected score on the index shrinks to one activity for those who have been under correctional control and lack CSO connections. Among similarly situated custodial citizens with CSO connections who have been under correctional control, however, the expected score on the index increases to 2.25 activities.Footnote 120

Figure 4 The impact of criminal justice contact and CSO connections on participation

Notes: The figure reflects the interactive effect of criminal justice contact and CSO connections on participation among CAS respondents in the Chicago Metropolitan Area. Expected values derived from the nonvoting political participation model (refer to table 2).

Remarkably, the size of the positive association of personal connections to CSOs on nonvoting political participation is larger for those with criminal justice contact than for those without it. For noncustodial citizens, personal connections to CSOs improve nonvoting political participation by about .3 political activities. Among Chicagoans the police have detained, CSO connections improve the expected score on the index by about .6 political activities. Personal connections to CSOs also increase the expected score by 1.25 political activities among respondents who have experienced some form of correctional control. Moreover, the expected value of nonvoting participation for custodial citizens with personal ties to CSOs exceeds that of their counterparts without criminal justice contact.

Nevertheless, personal connections to CSOs appear to not moderate the depressive effects of criminal justice contact on voting. Our finding, which is important, may reflect that the material and attitudinal barriers to voting custodial citizens face remain high despite any capacity of CSOs to pave the way for voting. Even in places like metropolitan Chicago, where all custodial citizens are eligible to vote, and even as their connections to CSOs may ease participation in other forms of civic engagement, barriers to voting may remain. Lastly, the results reveal that personal connections to CSOs by custodial citizens the police have detained for questioning may not be statistically significant for voting or nonvoting political participation.Footnote 121

One implication of our findings is that the empirical claims of the literature about the negative democratic effect of the carceral state are too general to adequately describe civic voluntarism by custodial citizens. Certainly, custodial citizens may withdraw from or neglect voting. Nonetheless, many continue to participate outside the ballot box, especially when they are connected to CSOs. Moreover, some custodial citizens will begin participating beyond voting because they have personal connections to CSOs. Such connections may make their participation more likely and frequent because the CSOs create opportunities for education, activation, and mobilization, as they do for noncustodial citizens.

Aggregate-Level Data

Based on our results from the individual-level analysis, combined with the broader empirical findings in the literature on the political behavior and attitudes of custodial citizens, we explore a simple set of predictions about criminal justice contact at the community-level: greater criminal justice contact is associated with decreases in electoral participation, measured by voting and greater criminal justice contact is associated with increases in nonvoting political participation. Recall that our aggregate criminal justice contact measure is felony conviction rate. It is, as table 3 displays, statistically associated with lower turnout in the 2015 mayoral election. We logged the rate of felony convictions such that the coefficient estimate is interpreted as the absolute change in 2015 turnout given a percent change in felony convictions. Thus, a 5% increase in the felony conviction rate decreases expected voter turnout at the community-level in 2015 by approximately four percentage points. Also, while the relationship is not statistically significant, the felony conviction rate is negatively associated with the 2014 general election turnout.

Table 3 Effect of conviction rates and CSO densities on voting and nonvoting participation

Note: All dependent variables are continuous, and are modeled using ordinary least squares regression.

* p<.05; **p<.01; ***p<.001.

Independent of CSO density, the rate of felony convictions is associated with increased nonvoting political participation, measured by 311 calls. Moving from the minimum value of felony conviction rate (.018) to its mean value (7.5) increases the rate of nonemergency calls in Chicago from 24 calls per 1,000 residents in police beats to just over 100 calls. Similarly, the felony conviction rate positively relates to meeting attendance, with the relationship approaching statistical significance. The positive effect that may exist between the felony conviction rate on both types of nonvoting political participation perhaps indicates neighborhood disorder and maybe lower (or higher) levels of community efficacy.Footnote 122 That would mean felony conviction rates co-occur with needs for nonemergency assistance/antagonistic policing practices in need of redress.Footnote 123

Furthermore, one would expect that the scale of CSO presence in communities would particularly influence political participation by custodial citizens, whereby CSOs mitigate the demobilizing effects of criminal justice contact. We test this expectation at the community-level by interacting felony conviction rates and CSO density. Parallel to the results from our individual level analysis, political participation should be greater in communities where conviction rates are higher and the presence of CSOs are denser, compared to communities with lower CSO densities. Comparatively, lesser CSO densities and lower conviction rates should matter less for political participation outcomes at the community-level. While CSO density and conviction rates independently increase requests for nonemergency assistance, we do not observe in table 4 a statistically significant interactive association with nonvoting political participation or with voting.

Table 4 Interactive effect of conviction rates and CSO densities on voting and nonvoting political participation

Notes: All dependent variables are continuous, and are modeled using ordinary least squares regression.

* p<.05; **p<.01; ***p<.001. Coefficients reflect fully specified models, located in table A12 of the online appendix.

Figure 5 displays the marginal effects of CSO density, conviction rate, and the interaction between the two on each outcome of interest. These visualizations highlight that, independent of the felony conviction rate, the density of CSOs are positively related to nonvoting political participation. That is true, too, for the felony conviction rate in relation to 311 calls, regardless of CSO density. We interpret those results to mean that CSO density positively increases requests for nonemergency assistance in communities with either low or high felony conviction rates. Our interpretation is plausible, given that “organizational resources predict collective efficacy and [CSOs] produce externalities that foster collective action” in Chicago.Footnote 124

Figure 5 Conviction rate, CSO density, and participation among Chicago police beats

Notes: The marginal effect of conviction rate, CSOs per 1,000 in the population and their interaction on voting, attendance at police beat meetings, and requests for nonemergency assistance. Coefficient estimates reflect models presented in table 4.

However, we must reiterate two points. First, higher rates of 311 calls may result from greater needs for nonemergency assistance in high criminal justice contact (i.e., high felony conviction rate) communities. Second, higher attendance at police beat meetings may stem from greater degrees of police-community antagonisms, if policing is more concentrated, “hot spot” oriented, and aggressive. Put another way, higher rates of citizen-initiated contact with government in one form or another in communities with more custodial citizens could result from a need in such communities for greater attention from public officials, a need that may be absent in communities with fewer custodial citizens.

To address those potentialities, we employed a matching causal inference strategy that allowed us to compare the impact of CSO density among similarly situated communities that differ primarily by felony conviction rates. The strategy allowed us to compare low conviction rate communities to otherwise similarly situated high conviction rate communities. We describe the matching strategy and report results in full in the online appendix. Results from the matched analysis generally corroborate conclusions we drew from our analysis of the full sample before matching communities by rates of felony convictions. Specifically, greater CSO density is associated with greater requests for nonemergency assistance and attendance at police beat meetings among communities with either low or high felony conviction rates (refer to table 5 and figure 6).

Table 5 Matched analysis: Interactive effect of conviction rates and CSO densities on voting and nonvoting political participation

Notes: All dependent variables are continuous, and modeled using ordinary least squares regression.

*p<.05; **p<.01; ***p<.001.

Figure 6 Conviction rate, CSO density, and participation among matched police beats

Notes: The marginal effects of conviction rate, CSOs per 1,000 in the population, and their interaction on voting, attendance at police beat meetings, and requests for nonemergency assistance, among matched police beats. Coefficient estimates reflect models presented in table 5.

To be clear, greater CSO density is associated with greater attendance at police beat meetings and requests for nonemergency assistance among low-conviction communities that are comparable in other ways to their high-conviction counterparts. Neither do conviction rates by themselves appear to impact nonvoting political behavior, nor does CSO density operate differently for low- or high-conviction communities. The overriding factor influencing nonvoting political participation appears to be CSO density. Results from the matching strategy, then, confirm that our broader findings about CSO density and nonvoting political participation are not due to need alone in those communities.

Voting, however, is different. While increasing CSO density is associated with increasing voter turnout in high and low criminal justice contact communities in Chicago in 2014, the slope of increase is greater for low conviction communities than for high ones. This illuminates how we might interpret the effects of CSOs on nonvoting political participation in communities. Although the interaction term for convictions rates and CSO density does not achieve statistical significance for either meeting attendance or 311 calls per capita, as is the case with the results of the unmatched analysis presented earlier in table 4 and figure 5, the nature of the relationships are similar: CSO density increases nonvoting political behavior in high-conviction and low-conviction police beats, even if the size of the effect is larger in low-conviction communities.

Overall, CSOs are associated with more nonvoting political participation in high conviction communities, which parallels what we observed in the individual-level analysis, whereby personal connections to CSOs were associated with increased nonvoting political participation by custodial citizens. Also, contacting government, either through attendance at police beat meetings or making requests for nonemergency assistance, is about more than need. CSO density matters as there is an association between CSO density and increased nonvoting political participation, regardless of community-level conviction rates. However, as we generally observed in the individual-level analysis, where personal connections to CSOs were not associated with changes in voting, barriers may remain that hinder higher densities of CSOs from yielding greater degrees of voting by communities with high rates of criminal justice contact.Footnote 125

Discussion and Conclusion

Studies of the influence of involuntary criminal justice contact on political participation reveal how unwanted interactions with the carceral state negatively influence political behavior by individuals and communities. Such studies, which mainly report on voting, suggest that criminal justice contact shifts many custodial citizens from political engagement to political quiescence, assuming they ever were politically active. Hence, involuntary criminal justice contact may yield “diluted political engagement,”Footnote 126 which reduces the already low political influence of custodial citizens as individuals and collectives.Footnote 127 But there is a bifurcation of participation by custodial citizens: custodial citizens may engage less as voters but their nonvoting political participation may not decline. In fact, the nonvoting political participation by custodial citizens may increase.

Nonvoting political participation by people who have had criminal justice contact, as our results suggest, is strongly associated with their personal connections to civil society organizations. This association may result from causal mechanisms inherent in specific forms of organizing and mobilization, but also service provision, by CSOs. When CSOs assist custodial citizens to solve problems arising from criminal justice contact (e.g., unemployment, precarious housing, lack of affordable legal assistance, etc.), they may implicitly or explicitly assist them—and their communities—to overcome efficacy and resource barriers to greater nonvoting (and sometimes voting) participation.Footnote 128 Although our study was not designed to identify causality, future research on political participation—including nonvoting political participation—by custodial citizens that applies careful causal identification strategies are warranted. Additionally, it may be the case that particular types of CSOs matter more to increased (or reduced) political participation by custodial citizens and communities where more of them reside. That is undetermined. Insights from qualitative studies of custodial citizenship and participation, however, hint that some types of CSOs may prove more influential than others in shaping the engagement of people who have had criminal justice contact.Footnote 129

Additionally, the observed relationship between personal connections to CSOs and increasing nonvoting political activities by custodial citizens, specifically individuals who experienced correctional control, is important to keep in mind. Nonvoting political participation is conventional political participation.Footnote 130 Depending on the measure, nonvoting participation is more common than casting a ballot in the United States.Footnote 131 Hence, the strength of the association between personal connections to CSOs and increasing nonvoting political participation among custodial citizens reminds us that they—even those whom the state has held tightest and longest via correctional control—are not that much different from noncustodial citizens when it comes to nonvoting political participation. Custodial citizens volunteer with campaigns, attend public meetings, make public-regarding contact with government via nonemergency call systems or letters and emails, recruit others to participate, and engage via a variety of participatory modes.

Accordingly, nonvoting political participation by custodial citizens and its breadth of activities, inclusive of electoral ones (e.g., volunteering with campaigns) and nonelectoral ones (e.g., petitioning), deserves as much attention as registering to vote and voting. To be blunt, social scientists, particularly political scientists, are overly concerned with the effect of criminal justice contact on voting, paying too little attention to political participation beyond voting by custodial citizens. Yet nonvoting political participation is perhaps more likely to strengthen the voice of custodial citizens in relation to distributive politics that condition their full citizenship.

Furthermore, much of the CSO activity in relation to political organizing and mobilizing of custodial citizens is and will be for individual and collective goods, not the ballot. In increasing numbers of cities and states, the restoration of social and civil rights to custodial citizens without them is the primary attention of CSOs concerned about the democratic effects of criminal justice contact. Their work is marked by advocacy and lobbying campaigns, not voter registration and turnout drives, to remove the bars on access to social welfare benefits (e.g., food stamps and public housing) and to open labor markets through “ban the box” (i.e., removal of screener questions from job applications that may reduce employment of people with criminal records).Footnote 132 Additionally, a lot of organizing of custodial citizens is less about individuals and more about their communities in the name of universal improvement and community development.

Are we calling for political scientists and others to abandon the study of voting by custodial citizens? No. Normative, empirical, and substantive reasons remain for us to keep studying custodial citizens as slack resources before, during, and after elections.Footnote 133 Certainly, political mobilization of custodial citizens for greater democratic participation obligates attention to the restoration of voting rights and other electoral matters. There are, for example, significant activities underway in Florida to immediately re-enfranchise all custodial citizens without records of violent crime and to return the ballot to prison inmates in California, Massachusetts, and New Jersey.

Nevertheless, political participation of custodial citizens as voters may not increase, regardless of the success of those voting-rights restoration campaigns. It also may not increase despite personal connections to civil society organizations as we observed in our Chicago research. The results failed to show statistically significant relationships between criminal justice contact, personal connections to CSOs, and registering to vote and voting at both the individual and aggregate levels. More concretely, the negative relationship between criminal justice contact and voting may endure even by custodial citizens in communities where voting rights restoration happens immediately after incarceration and where CSOs are dense and personal connections to them are strong.

Before we conclude, it is worth reiterating the descriptive character of our study. We are not able to draw conclusions about the causal pathways of criminal justice contact, CSO connections, and political participation. Not only do we lack administrative data on individual level connections to CSOs and participatory activities beyond voting, our individual-level data is cross-sectional and from a survey subject to selection bias. It may be, for instance, that individuals who are connected to CSOs are also the sort of people likely to participate at high levels. Previous research suggests otherwise, however, and demonstrates that nonpolitical institutions are instrumental to cultivating the political skills and interests important to participation. Yet we are unsure about the exact nature of this relationship from cross-sectional, observational data. While our use of aggregate data, which ameliorates sampling and response bias, produced results that generally support the claim that CSOs increase participation in all kinds of communities, we observed that the magnitude of the civil society potential for increased civic voluntarism in communities with lower rates of custodial citizens was greater than what we observed in communities with higher rates of custodial citizens. Cumulative disadvantage and institutional barriers to participation, which exacerbate each other, construct obstacles for custodial citizens and their communities to full participation in political life. In the absence of better data, however, we can only postulate about how CSO connections shape civic education, access, and engagement, and whether variation in civic voluntarism by custodial citizens is indicative of relative disempowerment or strength.

Still, our findings disrupt the characterization that communities where criminal justice contact is prevalent are beleaguered, possessing weak capacities for personal and collective efficacy, which undermine engagement of their custodial residents in the polis. For example, our study suggests that citizen-initiated contact with government can be greater in communities with higher rates of residents with criminal convictions than in communities with lower rates of residents with criminal convictions. Thus, communities with high rates of criminal justice contact may not participate less in all forms of action, at least when the civic voluntarism in question includes behaviors beyond the frequency of voting.

Also, our research encourages political scientists to rethink how we understand and measure the political lives of marginalized people and their communities. By widening our theoretical and empirical gazes beyond “the electoral-representative dynamics that have become the taken-for-granted object of our attention”Footnote 134 we can better observe how custodial citizens and their communities do politics, as well as better observe how their political behavior may bear on and be shaped by the institutions and distributive politics of the carceral state.

Finally, echoing Majic, “it is . . . imperative that we examine nonprofit organizations more closely and identify the ways they may engage in civic life, especially if we are concerned with expanding inclusion and justice through and in the democratic political process.”Footnote 135 This is especially true in the age of the carceral state and its expanding custodial citizenry. Research into the broader effects, particularly participatory paradoxes, that the American carceral state produces for civil society must continue, inclusive of the ways civil society organizations foster (or inhibit) the political participation of custodial citizens and their communities.

Supplementary Materials

Appendix

  • Description of the Chicago Area Study Data

  • Description of the Aggregate Data

  • Analysis of the Chicago Area Study

  • Analysis of the Supplemental Aggregate Data

https://doi.org/10.1017/S1537592718002074

Footnotes

They thank Wesley Skogan for data from the Chicago Alternative Policing Strategy, as well as Tom Ogorzalek and Tracy Burch for advice about data sources in Chicago. Additionally, they thank the Chicago Justice Project. They also thank Adam Glynn, Pierce Edwards, and the anonymous reviewers for their comments on the paper, and Michael Bernhard for his unwavering support. An earlier version of this paper was presented at the 2016 American Political Science Association meeting.

A list of permanent links to Supplementary Materials provided by the authors precedes the References section.

1 “Criminal justice contact” means here involuntary contact with the criminal justice system.

5 National Center for Victims of Crime 2016; Enns Reference Enns2016.

6 U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics 1993; U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics 2018.

7 Clark 2018.

8 Jacobs Reference Jacobs2015, 1 and n. 4.

9 U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics 2012.

10 Jacobs Reference Jacobs2015, xi.

21 Sances and You Reference Sances and You2017; Harris Reference Harris2016; Katzenstein and Waller Reference Katzenstein and Waller2015; U.S. Department of Justice 2015.

22 The democratic effects of juvenile criminal justice contact on the civic voluntarism of youth and during adulthood merit future investigation. Surveillance and policing of youth in the United States (e.g., police in schools) are common and youth interactions with the criminal justice systems for juveniles and adults are widespread; see Shedd Reference Shedd2015, Rios Reference Rios2011. Juvenile criminal justice contact can affect subsequent adult criminal justice contact. It is plausible that youth contact with punitive institutions of juvenile criminal justice provides “formative political experience” as punitive institutions of schools do for youth; see Bruch and Soss Reference Bruch and Soss2018. If so, juvenile criminal justice contact may have negative consequences for juvenile civic voluntarism and subsequent adult civic voluntarism.

23 Weaver and Lerman Reference Weaver and Lerman2010; Hjalmarsson and Lopez Reference Hjalmarsson and Lopez2010; Lerman and Weaver Reference Lerman and Weaver2014a; Kang and Dawes 2017; Laniyonu Reference Laniyonu2018.

25 Some types of vehicle and pedestrian stops by police officers, as well as all types of correctional control, are associated with greater distrust and less confidence in government and lower perceptions of public institutions as legitimate; Clear Reference Clear2007; Weaver and Lerman Reference Weaver and Lerman2010; Lerman and Weaver Reference Lerman and Weaver2014a; Epp, Maynard-Moody, and Haider-Markel Reference Epp, Maynard-Moody and Haider-Markel2014.

26 Weaver and Lerman Reference Weaver and Lerman2010, 818.

28 Soss and Weaver Reference Soss and Weaver2017, 567.

29 Ibid, 565.

30 See, e.g., Hull Reference Hull2006; Howard 2017; Dilts Reference Dilts2014; Weaver and Lerman Reference Weaver and Lerman2010; Lerman and Weaver Reference Lerman and Weaver2014a, Reference Lerman and Weaver2014b; White Reference White2015; Burch Reference Burch2013; Manza and Uggen Reference Manza and Uggen2006; Bruch, Marx Ferree, and Soss 2010; Lee, Porter, and Comfort, Reference Lee, Porter and Comfort2014; Muller and Schrage Reference Muller and Schrage2014; Walker Reference Walker2014; Gerber et al. Reference Gerber, Huber, Meredith, Biggers and Hendry2017; Kang and Dawes 2017; Laniyonu Reference Laniyonu2018.

32 E.g., Cohen and Rodgers 1995; Warren Reference Warren2001; Putnam Reference Putnam2000; Fung Reference Fung2003; Majic Reference Majic2011; LeRoux and Krawczyk, Reference LeRoux and Krawczyk2014; Han Reference Han2016; Fyall and Allard Reference Fyall and Allard2017.

33 Personal connections to CSOs by juveniles with criminal justice contact may also mitigate some of the negative political effects of juvenile criminal justice contact and influence civic voluntarism in adulthood. However, that is for future study.

36 Rosenstone and Hansen Reference Rosenstone and Hansen2003, 2.

37 Mettler and Soss Reference Mettler and Soss2004, 56.

40 Mettler and Soss Reference Mettler and Soss2004, 56.

41 Fairchild Reference Fairchild1977, 298.

42 Tyler, Fagan, and Geller Reference Tyler, Fagan and Geller2014; Epp, Maynard-Moody, and Haider-Markel Reference Epp, Maynard-Moody and Haider-Markel2014; Justice and Meares Reference Justice and Meares2014; Miller Reference Miller2015.

43 Weaver and Lerman Reference Weaver and Lerman2010; Lerman and Weaver Reference Lerman and Weaver2014a; Kang and Dawes 2017; Haselswerdt Reference Haselswerdt2009; Hjalmarsson and Lopez Reference Hjalmarsson and Lopez2010; Meredith and Morse Reference Meredith and Morse2014, Reference Meredith and Morse2015; Gerber et al., Reference Gerber, Huber, Meredith, Biggers and Hendry2015; White Reference White2015. However, a provocative study using administrative data on pre-incarceration and post-release voting in Pennsylvania between 2008 and 2012 concludes “spending time in prison has almost no effect on voting”; Gerber et al. Reference Gerber, Huber, Meredith, Biggers and Hendry2017, 1131–32. Nonetheless, as its authors note, “that incarceration per se does not appear to cause a large reduction in [voting] suggests that scholars should follow the path of recent research that examines how citizen preferences and behaviors are shaped by lower-level contact [e.g., detentions for questioning] with these other elements of the state.”

44 Lerman and Weaver Reference Lerman and Weaver2014a, 220–21. Furthermore, there is evidence that noncustodial citizens in romantic relationships with custodial citizens are less likely to vote; Lee, Porter, and Comfort Reference Lee, Porter and Comfort2014; Sugie Reference Sugie2015.

47 Owens Reference Owens2014, 258.

48 Lerman and Weaver Reference Lerman and Weaver2014a; Wildeman, Hacker, and Weaver, Reference Wildeman, Hacker and Weaver2014; Burch Reference Burch2013.

51 Verba, Schlozman, and Brady Reference Verba, Schlozman and Brady1995.

52 Han Reference Han2016, 296.

53 Berry, Portney, and Thomson Reference Berry, Portney and Thomson1993, 12.

54 De Tocqueville 2002; de Beaumont and de Tocqueville 1979.

55 Sampson Reference Sampson2012, 179.

61 Han Reference Han2014; Rosenstone and Hansen Reference Rosenstone and Hansen2003; Verba, Schlozman, and Brady Reference Verba, Schlozman and Brady1995. Many individuals, however, involve themselves in organizations without “pressure” from CSOs. Instead of waiting on the organizing and mobilizing of CSOs, they rely on self-motivation. They may have orientations or predispositions to participate regardless of any activities by or engagement with CSOs. For them, recruitment by CSOs in not necessary to their participation, which is something the authors of the classic Civic Voluntarism Model acknowledge.

63 Burch Reference Burch2013, ch. 6.

64 De Tocqueville 2002; Putnam Reference Putnam2000; Han Reference Han2016.

65 Marwell Reference Marwell2004; Berry, Portney, and Thomson Reference Berry, Portney and Thomson1993.

66 Harris 1999; Marwell Reference Marwell2004; Owens Reference Owens2007; Fyall and Allard Reference Fyall and Allard2017.

68 Levi 2004; Marwell Reference Marwell2004; Owens Reference Owens2007.

71 Verba, Schlozman, and Brady Reference Verba, Schlozman and Brady1995, 17–18.

72 Harris Reference Harris2001; Wong 2009; Graauw Reference Graauw2016.

73 Skocpol Reference Skocpol1990, 456.

75 Rosenstone and Hansen Reference Rosenstone and Hansen2003, 83-84.

77 Rosenstone and Hansen Reference Rosenstone and Hansen2003, 32; Verba, Schlozman, and Brady Reference Verba, Schlozman and Brady1995.

79 Wong Reference Wong2006; Barreto et al. Reference Barreto, Manzano, Ramirez and Rim2009; Majic Reference Majic2011; LeRoux and Krawczyk Reference LeRoux and Krawczyk2014; Graauw Reference Graauw2016; García Bedolla and Michelson 2012; Warren Reference Warren2001.

80 Harris Reference Harris2001; Wong 2009; Majic Reference Majic2011; García Bedolla and Michelson 2012; LeRoux and Krawczyk Reference LeRoux and Krawczyk2014; Graauw Reference Graauw2016.

81 Berry, Portney, and Thomson Reference Berry, Portney and Thomson1993, 95–97.

83 Examples include EPOCA (Ex-Prisoners and Prisoners Organizing for Community Advancement) in Worcester, MA; V.O.T.E. (Voice of the Ex-Offender) in New Orleans, EXPO (Ex-Prisoners Organizing) in Milwaukee, Wisconsin; and the California, Texas, and North Carolina chapters of All of Us or None; Owens Reference Owens2014; Kaufman Reference Kaufman2015; Flores and Cossyleon Reference Flores and Cossyleon2016.

85 Sampson Reference Sampson2012, 77.

86 Ibid., 21.

87 Sampson and Loeffler Reference Sampson and Loeffler2010; Visher, Yahner, and La Vigne Reference Visher, Yahner and Vigne2010.

88 Commonly used datasets such as the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health and the Fragile Families and Child Well Being Study are two-decades old and include truncated age cohorts. More recent data from the 2006 African American Men’s Survey and the 2016 American National Election Studies include measures of criminal justice contact but the former only includes voter registration as political participation and the latter excludes measures of connections to CSOs.

92 Sampson Reference Sampson2012, 190.

93 Skogan and Hartnett Reference Skogan and Hartnett1997.

95 Ibid.

96 Sampson Reference Sampson2012, 208.

97 Rosenstone and Hansen Reference Rosenstone and Hansen2003, 86.

98 That is higher than the turnout of registered voters (73%) in Cook County elections that year, according to the Illinois State Board of Elections. CAS respondents may have over-reported voting, which is common in public opinion surveys because of the social desirability associated with voting. Selection bias may also explain the high rate of reported voting political participation in the CAS. Individuals who chose to participate in the CAS could be more civic-minded—and more likely to vote—than the general population. Either type of bias could skew empirical results in our favor. As we describe in our appendix, we took steps to address issues related to selection bias in survey data. While we cannot correct for response bias, abstaining from other types of political activities, like attending a protest or signing petitions, does not carry with it the stigma of failing in one’s duty as a citizen associated with nonvoting; Holbrook et al 2010, Persson and Solevid Reference Persson and Solevid2013.

99 Descriptive statistics for all variables in both datasets are in the online appendix, which reports the descriptive statistics for the CAS (tables A1–A2) and the aggregate dataset (tables A4–A5).

100 Sampling bias in surveys leads to samples unrepresentative of the overall population. Sampling weights are constructed to address this issue. However, individuals with criminal justice contact often are unlike the general population, differing, for instance, on dimensions of race, gender, and age. The subsample of Chicago Area Study respondents with criminal justice contact likely differs from the general population under correctional contact in the Chicago metropolitan area. Exact, current and complete demographic information on metropolitan Chicago’s custodial citizenry, especially members of the correctional population, is unavailable. In lieu of better demographic data, we compare Chicago Area Study respondents with criminal justice contact to Cook County Jail admissions in 2011 and the Illinois prison population in 2010. The subsample of custodial citizens in the Chicago Area Study is less black, more Latino, more female, slightly older, and more likely to be married than Cook County jailees and Illinois prison inmates. Full comparisons of their characteristics are available in the online appendix. The difference in characteristics likely biases statistical findings in favor of our prediction. This may be a limitation of our analysis. Barring better sampling strategies for social surveys of the behavior of custodial citizens, which we strongly advocate, there is little that political scientists can do to alter the nature of our samples.

101 For more information about the data and its collection, see http://convictions.smartchicagoapps.org/#five-years-of-data. Additionally, the online appendix describes the felony conviction data and other data we considered using to complement or substitute felony convictions as our aggregate measure of criminal justice contact.

102 The distribution of felony convictions had a minimum value of zero and a maximum value of 33. The lower quartile fell below 2.5 felony convictions.

103 Sampson Reference Sampson2012, ch. 8.

104 Ibid.

105 Ibid.

107 For more information on the IRS classifications, see https://www.irs.gov/charities-non-profits/types-of-tax-exempt-organizations.

108 The minimum was .032 CSOs and the maximum was 152 CSOs.

109 “More than any kind of activity, contacting [government and public officials] is distinguished by the control the participant can exercise over timing of the activity and the content of the message”; Verba, Schlozman, and Brady Reference Verba, Schlozman and Brady1995, 89.

110 Although the creation of CAPS increased the opportunity structure for political engagement, our time frame corresponded with “the period of the greatest decline in overall attendance levels” at police beat meetings due to municipal budget cuts of CAPS and the redeployment of police officers. Skogan Reference Skogan2016, 7. Thus, the CAPS meeting data provides a hard test for our theory.

112 The 311 call systems are a simple way of citizen-initiated contact with government, especially to report public problems such as potholes and property blight. They provide a “low-transaction-cost access to government that have been shown to instill a sense of trust and offer the promise of increased bureaucratic responsiveness,” while fostering individual and collective efficacy; Minkoff Reference Minkoff2016, 212.

114 Lerman and Weaver Reference Lerman and Weaver2014b.

115 The online appendix details our construction of the aggregate dataset.

116 Although our key independent and dependent variables include both conventional and novel ones, some are imperfect. We use voter turnout estimates within police beats, calculated by simple area weighting. Felony convictions exclude criminal justice contact that does not result in arrests, charges without conviction, and convictions for misdemeanors. The CSO density measure includes a variety of nonprofit organizations, inclusive of those that do and do not target custodial citizens. They range from religious congregations like the Chicago Foursquare Church to the local affiliate of federated community organizing groups such as the Gamaliel Foundation, to labor organizations such as Women in Aviation International. The CSO density measure also excludes organizations that possess tax-exempt status but are not required to register with the IRS (e.g., small religious congregations). While our CSO density measure is blunt, its noise should bias empirical analyses toward null results. To control for various sources of bias that may influence conviction rates, civic engagement, and CSO density, we leverage data on housing tenure, age and racial compositions, educational attainment, poverty, and unemployment from the U.S. Census Bureau.

117 We model nonvoting behavior with Poisson regression, as noted in table 1. If the distribution of the dependent variable is over dispersed, it is appropriate to evaluate the data with an alternative model (e.g., negative binomial regression or a quasi-Poisson model). Tests for dispersion, noted in table 1 and table 2, resulted in no evidence of data overdispersion. For more on this point, refer to the online appendix.

118 Walker Reference Walker2014; Lee, Porter and Comfort Reference Lee, Porter and Comfort2014.

119 Lerman and Weaver 2010; Lee, Porter and Comfort Reference Lee, Porter and Comfort2014; Walker Reference Walker2014.

120 Tests of the robustness of our models are available from the online appendix; See figure A1 and tables A9–A11.

121 Our null findings may result from our measure of voting, which is self-reported. Because of social desirability, respondents often misreport their voting histories on surveys; Holbrook and Krosnick Reference Holbrook and Krosnick2010. Even when self-reported voting is not correlated with criminal justice contact and positively correlated with nonvoting political participation, contact may be negatively associated with voting when measured by validated voter records; Walker Reference Walker2014. We may also have null findings because voting is modeled among registered voters. Thus, individuals in the sample with connections to the criminal justice system have already overcome a significant barrier to voting. We are cautious in interpreting our null result that criminal justice contact is not associated with voting in Chicago.

122 Sampson and Loeffler Reference Sampson and Loeffler2010.

123 White and Trump Reference White and Trump2016; Lerman and Weaver Reference Lerman and Weaver2014b.

124 Sampson Reference Sampson2012, 208.

130 Verba, Schlozman, and Brady Reference Verba, Schlozman and Brady1995; Han Reference Han2016.

131 Verba, Schlozman, and Brady Reference Verba, Schlozman and Brady1995.

134 Soss and Weaver Reference Soss and Weaver2016, 75.

135 Majic Reference Majic2011, 832.

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Figure 0

Figure 1 Civil society organizations pave ways for political participation

Figure 1

Figure 2 Redeeming citizenship by/for people with criminal justice contactPhoto credit: Michael Leo Owens

Figure 2

Figure 3 Marginal effects of criminal justice contact on participationNotes: The figure reflects the marginal effect of correctional control, being detained by the police, and CSO connections on each item in the nonvoting participation index. Coefficients reflect fully specified models, located in tables A6 and A7 of the online appendix.

Figure 3

Table 1 Effects of criminal justice contact on political participation

Figure 4

Table 2 The interactive effects of contact and CSO connections on forms of participation

Figure 5

Figure 4 The impact of criminal justice contact and CSO connections on participationNotes: The figure reflects the interactive effect of criminal justice contact and CSO connections on participation among CAS respondents in the Chicago Metropolitan Area. Expected values derived from the nonvoting political participation model (refer to table 2).

Figure 6

Table 3 Effect of conviction rates and CSO densities on voting and nonvoting participation

Figure 7

Table 4 Interactive effect of conviction rates and CSO densities on voting and nonvoting political participation

Figure 8

Figure 5 Conviction rate, CSO density, and participation among Chicago police beatsNotes: The marginal effect of conviction rate, CSOs per 1,000 in the population and their interaction on voting, attendance at police beat meetings, and requests for nonemergency assistance. Coefficient estimates reflect models presented in table 4.

Figure 9

Table 5 Matched analysis: Interactive effect of conviction rates and CSO densities on voting and nonvoting political participation

Figure 10

Figure 6 Conviction rate, CSO density, and participation among matched police beatsNotes: The marginal effects of conviction rate, CSOs per 1,000 in the population, and their interaction on voting, attendance at police beat meetings, and requests for nonemergency assistance, among matched police beats. Coefficient estimates reflect models presented in table 5.

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