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Comparison of Four General Theories of Crime and Deviance: Marijuana Use Among American and Bolivian University Students

NCJ Number
238114
Journal
International Criminal Justice Review Volume: 21 Issue: 4 Dated: December 2011 Pages: 333-352
Author(s)
Rohald Ardwan Meneses; Ronald L. Akers
Date Published
December 2011
Length
20 pages
Annotation
This study examined the empirical validity of four theories of criminal and deviant behavior.
Abstract
Explanations of deviant and criminal behavior have been widely studied in the United States and Europe with some studies also conducted in Asian countries. The authors believe that this study is the first to compare directly the extent to which major general social psychological theories of criminal and deviant behavior developed primarily in the United States (General Strain, Social Bonding, Self-Control, and Social Learning) are applicable to a Latin American society. The authors compare how well the theories explain variation in marijuana use among samples of university students in the United States and Bolivia using the same methodology and measurements in each. The results indicate that each of the theories do account for individual differences in use in both samples to some extent, with social learning theory receiving somewhat more support as an explanation of marijuana use in both societies. (Published Abstract)