Tulane University, New Orleans, LA, USA.
St. John's University, New York City, NY, USA.
Int J Offender Ther Comp Criminol. 2020 Dec;64(16):1696-1716. doi: 10.1177/0306624X20923254. Epub 2020 May 27.
Although self-control consistently emerges as one of the most robust correlates of delinquent behavior, limited empirical attempts have been made to explore the contextual variability of the relationship between self-control and delinquency outside of Western societies. Using data collected from 587 seventh- to ninth-grade students across 10 middle schools in a rural county of Southeast China, we examine self-control's efficacy in explaining juvenile delinquency in the presence of external environmental factors, and investigate relative strength of self-control and contextual factors in predicting delinquent behaviors. Our results confirm that self-control is an important predictor of delinquent behavior in a non-Western cultural context. However, certain environmental factors rooted in family, school, and peer groups are also shown to be the predictors of delinquent behavior where strength seems to exceed that of self-control. These findings shed more nuanced insights on the nexus between self-control, external situations, and delinquency, and in a broader sense, contribute to the elaboration of a more comprehensive understanding of self-control theory.
尽管自我控制一直是与犯罪行为最相关的因素之一,但在西方社会之外,很少有实证研究尝试探索自我控制与犯罪行为之间关系的情境可变性。本研究使用了来自中国东南部一个农村县的 10 所中学的 587 名 7 至 9 年级学生的数据,检验了在外部环境因素存在的情况下,自我控制在解释青少年犯罪中的作用,并调查了自我控制和情境因素在预测犯罪行为方面的相对强度。我们的研究结果证实,自我控制是一个非西方文化背景下犯罪行为的重要预测因素。然而,某些源于家庭、学校和同伴群体的环境因素也被证明是犯罪行为的预测因素,其强度似乎超过了自我控制。这些发现更细致地揭示了自我控制、外部情境和犯罪行为之间的关系,更广泛地说,有助于更全面地理解自我控制理论。