This research thesis seeks to improve current science by providing a systematic empirical basis for the investigation of the ways in which peer groups influence delinquent behavior. It uses results from the Adolescent Health Survey data to address these issues. Multilevel modeling techniques are used to analyze the results. Findings indicate peer group delinquency is strongly associated with an adolescent's own delinquency whether it be property-related or violent offending; characteristics of the adolescent's egocentric friendship network influence the delinquency-peer group association; early adolescence is when delinquent peers have the strongest influence on a delinquent's behavior; and school characteristics are associated with average delinquency involvement but rarely influence delinquency-peer group association. Tables, appendixes
Downloads
Similar Publications
- Human Decomposition Ecology at the University of Tennessee Anthropology Research Facility
- Identifying Facilitators and Barriers to Implementing the Say Something Anonymous Reporting System in Miami-Dade County, USA: A Qualitative Study
- Recreational Cannabis Legalization in Washington State: Residents' Opinions and Perceptions of Effects Five Years after Implementation