Walking the Talk? What Employers Say Versus What They Do
Princeton University · University of Wisconsin–Madison
Abstract
This article considers the relationship between employers' attitudes toward hiring exoffenders and their actual hiring behavior. Using data from an experimental audit study of entry-level jobs matched with a telephone survey of the same employers, the authors compare employers' willingness to hire black and white ex-offenders, as represented both by their self-reports and by their decisions in actual hiring situations. Employers who indicated a greater likelihood of hiring ex-offenders in the survey were no more likely to hire an ex-offender in practice. Furthermore, although the survey results indicated no difference in the likelihood of hiring black versus white ex-offenders, audit results show large…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 43.51
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 91
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Audit
- Psychology
- Telephone survey
- Race (biology)
- Social psychology
- White (mutation)
- Social desirability
- Control (management)
- Reduced inequalities