Parenting and Time Adolescents Spend in Criminogenic Settings: A Between- and Within-person Analysis
Files
Publication date
2014-07
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
License
Abstract
Although there has been increasing interest in explaining adolescents' crime involvement by the time adolescents spend in criminogenic settings, little is known about its determinants. We examine the extent to which (change in) parenting is related to (change in) time spent in criminogenic settings. Time spent in criminogenic settings is measured in a comprehensive way by including social and environmental characteristics of micro settings (200 by 200 m). Longitudinal multilevel analysis on two waves of panel data on a Dutch sample of 603 adolescents (age 12-19) showed that more parental monitoring, more parental limit setting and a higher quality of the parent adolescent relationship were related to less time spent in criminogenic settings (between-person). Decreases in parental limit setting and in the quality of the parent-adolescent relationship were related to increases in the amount of time spent in criminogenic settings over time (within-person). These findings emphasize the important role parents continue to play during adolescence.
Keywords
time spent in criminogenic settings, parental monitoring, parental limit setting, parent-adolescent relationship, longitudinal multilevel analysis, SYSTEMATIC SOCIAL OBSERVATION, DELINQUENT-BEHAVIOR, REINTERPRETATION, DISORDER, CONTEXTS, FAMILY, SCHOOL, NEIGHBORHOODS, ASSOCIATION, ADJUSTMENT, SDG 16 - Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions
Citation
Janssen, H J, Dekovic, M & Bruinsma, G J N 2014, 'Parenting and Time Adolescents Spend in Criminogenic Settings : A Between- and Within-person Analysis', British Journal of Criminology, vol. 54, no. 4, pp. 551-567. https://doi.org/10.1093/bjc/azu032