
Most of those measures are significantly lower today (and, current data being much easier to access now than in those days, I now know the picture was already changing by the time of the first printing in 1999).
For Americans under the age of 19:
- arrests for burglary fell 61% from 1990-2010 [1]
- murder arrests reached a sickening peak in 1993, then fell 71% by 2000, and another 20% from 2000-2010 [2]
- aggravated assault arrests peaked around 1994 and then dropped 28% by 2010 [3]
- drug sale/manufacturing arrest rates in 2010 were less than half their peak around 1997 [4]
- forcible rape arrests dropped 58% from 1990-2010 [5]
- weapon law violations in 2010 were half the peak level in the mid-90s [6]
- the dropout rate slid from about 15% in 1970, to around 12% in 1990, then to 7.5% in 2010. [7]
- from 1990 - 2010, teenage pregnancy rates fell 42%; births to teenagers dropped by half; and the rate of teenage abortions declined by 59% from the peak in 1988, reaching the lowest level since 1973 [8]
Among the mixed and negative indicators...
- arrests for drug possession/use were much higher in 2010 than 1990—even thought the rate dropped significantly from 2006-2010. [9]
- Simple assault arrests—assaults with no weapon and no significant injury—were much higher among girls in in 2010 than in 1990—and much lower among boys. [10]
- at this writing, sexually transmitted diseases among 15-19 year-olds are a mixed bag, with some infections down dramatically and others up just as dramatically. Syphilis fell to three cases per 100,000 in 2011; gonorrhea dropped to 388 cases per 100,000, chlamydia climbed to 1,886 per 100,000. [11] [12]
- In 1990, 20.6 percent of American children under age 18 lived in poverty.
- That percentage rose through the mid-90s, reaching 22.7 percent in 1993;
- then declined (to 16.2 percent in 2000),
- only to rise again, returning to 22 percent in 2010. [13]
— from Raising Adults
[1] Bureau of Justice Statistics http://www.bjs.gov/index.cfm?ty=pbdetail&iid=4515
[2] ibid[3] ibid
[4] ibid
[5] ibid
[6] ibid
[7] National Center for Education Statistics http://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d11/tables/dt11_117.asp
[8] US Department of Health and Human Services Office of Adolescent Health http://www.hhs.gov/ash/oah/adolescent-health-topics/reproductive-health/teen-pregnancy/trends.html
[9] US Department of Justice http://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/aus9010.pdf[10] ibid
[11] Centers for Disease Control and Prevention http://www.cdc.gov/std/health-disparities/age.htm
[12] Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Selected STDs by Age, Race/Ethnicity, and Gender, 1996-2009 http://wonder.cdc.gov/std-std-race-age.html
[13] United States Census Bureau Table 3. Poverty Status, by Age, Race and Hispanic Origin
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