Forensic Child and Youth Care Sciences, University of Amsterdam, 1001 NG, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Criminal Law, Freiburg, Germany.
J Youth Adolesc. 2021 Aug;50(8):1601-1615. doi: 10.1007/s10964-021-01417-z. Epub 2021 Apr 21.
The companions in crime hypothesis suggests that co-offending moderates the link between peer delinquency and adolescent delinquency. However, this hypothesis has rarely been investigated longitudinally. Hence, this study investigated the co-development of friends' delinquency and adolescents' delinquency, as well as the co-development of friends' delinquency and short-term mindsets (impulsivity and lack of school future orientation). Whether this co-development is stronger when adolescents engage in co-offending was also investigated. Three data waves with two year lags from an ethnically-diverse adolescent sample (at wave 1: N = 1365; 48.6% female; M = 13.67; age range = 12.33-15.09 years) in Switzerland were used. The results from parallel process latent growth modeling showed that the co-development between friends' delinquency and adolescents' delinquency was stronger when adolescents engaged in co-offending. Thus co-offending likely provides direct access to a setting in which adolescents continue to model the delinquency they learned with their peers.
犯罪伙伴假说表明,共同犯罪会缓和同伴犯罪与青少年犯罪之间的联系。然而,这一假说很少被纵向研究调查。因此,本研究调查了朋友犯罪和青少年犯罪的共同发展,以及朋友犯罪和短期心态(冲动和缺乏学校未来取向)的共同发展。当青少年参与共同犯罪时,这种共同发展是否更强也进行了调查。这项研究使用了来自瑞士一个种族多样化的青少年样本的三个具有两年时间间隔的数据波(第 1 波:N=1365;女性占 48.6%;M=13.67;年龄范围为 12.33-15.09 岁)。并行过程潜在增长模型的结果表明,当青少年参与共同犯罪时,朋友犯罪与青少年犯罪之间的共同发展更强。因此,共同犯罪可能为青少年继续模仿他们与同龄人一起学到的犯罪行为提供了直接途径。