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Journal Article

Citation

Senjo SR. J. Drug Educ. 2005; 35(1): 59-77.

Affiliation

Dept of Criminal Justice, Weber State University, Ogden, Utah 84408-1206, USA. ssenjo@weber.edu

Copyright

(Copyright © 2005, Baywood Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

16270698

Abstract

Male and female meth dealers exhibit numerous common characteristics and patterns. For example, both can be relatively heavy users and both have similar (long) criminal records. However, both groups show important distinctions in their drug dealing patterns. This exploratory study compares 34 male and 26 female meth dealers (N = 60) who were involved in the same criminal justice system of a single western state during the same time period. Among other things, the findings indicate that male dealers treat their trafficking activities more like a business, have more customers, make more money, and are more likely prepared for violence while dealing than females. In contrast, female dealers have more education, including graduate school, have been arrested less often and are more willing to try drug treatment than male dealers.


Language: en

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