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Parental Control of Teenagers in Primary and High School and Related Deviance

NCJ Number
242366
Journal
Revija za Kriminalistiko in Kriminologijo Volume: 63 Issue: 4 Dated: 2012 Pages: 311-320
Author(s)
Eva Bertok; Per-Olof Wikstrom, Ph.D.; Beth Hardie, Ph.D.; Gorazd Mesko, Ph.D.
Date Published
2012
Length
10 pages
Annotation
The paper presents the results of SPMAD - Study of parental monitoring and adolescent delinquency, which was carried out in early 2011 in Ljubljana.
Abstract
The construct of parental knowledge, a measurement of the child's ratings of parental familiarity with what one is doing, is frequently used in criminological research on the subject of surveillance/monitoring of the child. This construct is often compared with the self-reported delinquency. The paper presents the results of SPMAD - Study of parental monitoring and adolescent delinquency, which was carried out in early 2011 in Ljubljana, with a total of 409 primary- and 409 high school students participating in the study. The results show that higher parental supervision is still associated with lower rates of self-reported binge drinking and drug use in general, and to a lesser extent with cigarette smoking and consumption of marihuana. We also found out that the level of direct and indirect parental control (control in person and a call on a mobile phone) is significantly diminished with the increased age of adolescent which implies different parental control monitoring methods in the two groups of adolescents. (Published Abstract)