The present study examined relations among neighborhood structural and social characteristics, parenting practices, peer group affiliations, and delinquency among a group of serious adolescent offenders. The sample of 14-18-year-old boys (N = 488) was composed primarily of economically disadvantaged, ethnic-minority youth living in urban communities. The results indicate that weak neighborhood social organization is indirectly related to delinquency through its associations with parenting behavior and peer deviance and that a focus on just 1 of these microsystems can lead to oversimplified models of risk for juvenile offending. The authors also find that community social ties may confer both pro- and antisocial influences to youth, and they advocate for a broad conceptualization of neighborhood social processes as these relate to developmental risk for youth living in disadvantaged communities. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved)
(Publisher abstract provided.)
Downloads
Similar Publications
- Camera-View Augmented Reality: Overlaying Navigation Instructions on a Real-Time View of the Road
- Police Culture and Officer Behavior: Application of a Multilevel Framework
- Insights into turning points from the perspective of young people with out-of-home care experience: events, impact and facilitators of change