Zhao Jihong Solomon
Criminology, Justice and Policy Studies, University of Ontario Institute of Technology, Oshawa, Ontario, Canada.
Int J Offender Ther Comp Criminol. 2010 Aug;54(4):625-39. doi: 10.1177/0306624X09334218. Epub 2009 Apr 8.
On the basis of the reasoning of social support theory, the authors examine the macro effect of social support on anomie at the individual level. Data from international surveys have documented wide variation in anomie across nations, but to what extent this variation among nations can be contributed to structural characteristics has not been explored before. Using hierarchical linear modeling techniques to sort out the effects of structural context and personal characteristics on anomie across 31 European and North American nations, the authors test the hypothesis that variation in social support at the national level is inversely related to individuals' sense of anomie. The study results support the hypothesis that structural characteristics of a nation, such as social support and population growth, influence individuals' sense of anomie. At the individual level, the results are consistent with Merton's predictions about anomie and the reasoning of social support theory. Policy implication is discussed within the limitations of data.
基于社会支持理论的推理,作者们考察了社会支持在个体层面上对失范的宏观影响。国际调查数据记录了各国失范现象存在广泛差异,但此前尚未探讨过这种国家间差异在多大程度上可归因于结构特征。作者们运用分层线性建模技术,梳理出结构背景和个人特征对31个欧洲和北美国家失范现象的影响,检验了国家层面社会支持的差异与个体失范感呈负相关的假设。研究结果支持了这样的假设,即一个国家的结构特征,如社会支持和人口增长,会影响个体的失范感。在个体层面,研究结果与默顿对失范的预测以及社会支持理论的推理相一致。本文在数据局限性范围内讨论了政策含义。