4.5 Article

Who is the Key Player? A Network Analysis of Juvenile Delinquency

Journal

JOURNAL OF BUSINESS & ECONOMIC STATISTICS
Volume 39, Issue 3, Pages 849-857

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/07350015.2020.1737082

Keywords

Key player policies; Linear social interaction models; Network centrality measures; Network endogeneity; Network formation

Funding

  1. Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) [P01 HD31921]
  2. NICHD [R01 HD073342, R01 HD060726]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This article presents a methodology for empirically identifying the key player in a network and simulating the network evolution process after the removal of the key player. The findings suggest that the key player is not necessarily the most active delinquent, and a policy targeted at the key player can lead to a much higher delinquency reduction compared to removing the most active delinquent from the network.
This article presents a methodology for empirically identifying the key player, whose removal from the network leads to the optimal change in aggregate activity level in equilibrium [Ballester, C., Calvo-Armengol, A., and Zenou, Y. (2006), Who's Who in Networks. Wanted: The Key Player, Econometrica, 74: 1403-1417], allowing the network links to rewire after the removal of the key player. First, we propose an IV-based estimation strategy for the social-interaction effect, which is needed to determine the equilibrium activity level of a network, taking into account the potential network endogeneity. Next, to simulate the network evolution process after the removal of the key player, we adopt the general network formation model in Mele [(2017), A Structural Model of Dense Network Formation, Econometrica, 85: 825-850] and extend it to incorporate the unobserved individual heterogeneity in link formation decisions. We illustrate the methodology by providing the key player rankings in juvenile delinquency using information on friendship networks among U.S. teenagers. We find that the key player is not necessarily the most active delinquent or the delinquent who ranks the highest in standard (not microfounded) centrality measures. We also find that, compared to a policy that removes the most active delinquent from the network, a key-player-targeted policy leads to a much higher delinquency reduction.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available