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Social Learning and Self-Control: Assessing the Moderating Potential of Criminal Propensity

NCJ Number
239284
Journal
International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology Volume: 56 Issue: 2 Dated: April 2012 Pages: 191-202
Author(s)
Angela Yarbrough; Shayne Jones; Christopher Sullivan; Christine Sellers; John Cochran
Date Published
April 2012
Length
12 pages
Annotation
This study examined several social learning theory components to determine whether its influence was dependent on an individual's level of self-control.
Abstract
Social learning theory is one of the most prominent general theories of crime. Yet recent research has called into question its applicability to all offenders. Specifically, the influence of antisocial peers has been found to exert a stronger effect among those individuals evincing higher levels of criminal propensity (deemed social amplification), whereas other components of the theory have either not been shown to interact with criminal propensity or not been tested. This study examines several social learning theory components to determine whether its influence is dependent on an individual's level of self-control. Results suggest little support for the social amplification hypothesis as the components of social learning theory were found to operate similarly across individuals regardless one's level of self-control. Implications for criminological theory are discussed. (Published Abstract)