Chung He Len, Steinberg Laurence
Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
Dev Psychol. 2006 Mar;42(2):319-31. doi: 10.1037/0012-1649.42.2.319.
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.
本研究考察了一组严重青少年罪犯的邻里结构与社会特征、养育方式、同伴群体关系和犯罪行为之间的关系。样本为14至18岁的男孩(N = 488),主要由生活在城市社区的经济弱势少数民族青年组成。结果表明,邻里社会组织薄弱通过与养育行为和同伴偏差行为的关联而与犯罪行为间接相关,并且仅关注这些微观系统中的一个可能会导致对青少年犯罪风险的模型过于简化。作者还发现,社区社会关系可能会给青少年带来亲社会和反社会的影响,他们主张对邻里社会过程进行广泛的概念化,因为这些过程与生活在弱势社区的青少年的发展风险相关。