Midnight league

Midnight leagues are a series of initiatives starting in the 1990s with midnight basketball and expanding into other sports, notably association football, when, to curb inner-city crime in the United States and other countries, such sport leagues were founded where vulnerable urban youth could assemble during the night, and keeping themselves off the streets while engaging them with sports alternatives to drugs and crime.

Youth crime rates usually peak during night hours. Empirically, a 2006 study of the 1990-1994 period when urban midnight basketball programs were first initiated as a crime-prevention strategy, found that—while confounding factors were likely involved—property crime rates fell more rapidly in cities that were early adopters of the original midnight basketball model than in other American cities in the same period.[1]

References

  1. Hartmann, Douglas; Depro, Brooks (May 2006). "Rethinking Sports-Based Community Crime Prevention: A Preliminary Analysis of the Relationship Between Midnight Basketball and Urban Crime Rates". Journal of Sport and Social Issues. 30 (2): 180–196. doi:10.1177/0193723506286863.
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