Hanging Out with the Wrong Crowd? The Role of Unstructured Socializing in Adolescents’ Specialization in Delinquency and Substance Use
Autor: | Sonja E. Siennick, D. Wayne Osgood, Evelien M. Hoeben, F.M. Weerman |
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Přispěvatelé: | Criminology |
Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
Longitudinal study
05 social sciences Logit Multilevel model Peer group Commit Pathology and Forensic Medicine Developmental psychology Phenomenon 050501 criminology Juvenile delinquency 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences Psychology Law Deviance (sociology) 050104 developmental & child psychology 0505 law |
Zdroj: | Journal of Quantitative Criminology, 2020(January), 141-177. Springer New York |
ISSN: | 1573-7799 0748-4518 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s10940-019-09447-4 |
Popis: | Despite abundant attention to offending specialization in criminology, scholars have only recently started to explore opportunity-driven explanations for within-individual patterns of specialization. The current study examines whether unstructured socializing with specific friends can explain within-individual changes in adolescents’ degree of specialization in delinquency and substance use. Data were derived from the PROSPER Peers Project, a longitudinal study consisting of five waves of data on 11,183 adolescents (aged 10 to 17). The data include self-reports about engagement in delinquency and substance use, sociometric information, and information on the time respondents reported spending in unstructured socializing with their nominated friends. Hypotheses were tested with negative binomial and binomial logit multilevel models. The findings indicate that involvement in unstructured socializing with friends who steal, vandalize, commit violence, use alcohol, use cigarettes, or use drugs enhances adolescents’ risks for engagement in those respective behaviors. Such activity affects adolescents’ quantitative engagement as well as their level of specialization in these behaviors. The study indicates that routine activity—in particular involvement in unstructured socializing—explains within-individual changes in deviance specialization among adolescents. Thus, exposure to opportunities can explain why adolescents specialize in certain types of delinquency and substance use in one time-period, and in other types of behavior in other time-periods. This adds a proximate explanation for this phenomenon to other explanations that focus on local life circumstances and peer group affiliation. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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