Zimmerman Gregory M, Messner Steven F
College of Criminal Justice, Northeastern University.
Am Sociol Rev. 2010 Dec 1;75(6):958-980. doi: 10.1177/0003122410386688.
Although researchers consistently demonstrate that females engage in less criminal behavior than males across the life course, research on the variability of the gender gap across contexts is sparse. To address this issue, we examine the gender gap in self-reported violent crime among adolescents across neighborhoods. Multilevel models using data from the Project of Human Development in Chicago Neighborhoods (PHDCN) indicate that the gender gap in violent crime decreases as levels of neighborhood disadvantage increase. Further, the narrowing of the gender gap is explained by gender differences in peer influence on violent offending. Neighborhood disadvantage increases exposure to peer violence for both sexes, but peer violence has a stronger impact on violent offending for females than for males, producing the reduction in the gender gap at higher levels of disadvantage. We also find that the gender difference in the relationship between peer violence and offending is explained, in part, by (1) the tendency for females to have more intimate friendships than males, and (2) the moderating effect of peer intimacy on the relationship between peer violence and self-reported violent behavior.
尽管研究人员一直表明,在整个生命历程中,女性参与犯罪行为的程度低于男性,但关于不同背景下性别差距变化的研究却很少。为了解决这个问题,我们研究了不同社区青少年自我报告的暴力犯罪中的性别差距。使用来自芝加哥社区人类发展项目(PHDCN)数据的多层次模型表明,随着社区劣势程度的增加,暴力犯罪中的性别差距会减小。此外,性别差距的缩小可以通过同伴对暴力犯罪影响的性别差异来解释。社区劣势增加了男女双方接触同伴暴力的机会,但同伴暴力对女性暴力犯罪的影响比对男性更强,从而在更高劣势水平下导致性别差距缩小。我们还发现,同伴暴力与犯罪之间关系的性别差异部分可以由以下因素解释:(1)女性比男性更倾向于拥有亲密友谊的趋势,以及(2)同伴亲密程度对同伴暴力与自我报告的暴力行为之间关系的调节作用。