A Meta-Analysis of the Relations Between Three Types of Peer Norms and Adolescent Sexual Behavior

Publication date

2015-08

Authors

van de Bongardt, DaphneISNI 0000000419544278
Reitz, EllenISNI 0000000395496397
Sandfort, Theo
Dekovic, MajaISNI 0000000385736078

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

taverne

Abstract

The aim of the present meta-analysis was to investigate the associations between three types of peer norms-descriptive norms (peer sexual behaviors), injunctive norms (peer sexual attitudes), and peer pressure to have sex-and two adolescent sexual behavior outcomes (sexual activity and sexual risk behavior). Adolescent sexual activity was more strongly associated with descriptive norms (ESrfixed = .40) than with injunctive norms (ESrfixed = .22) or peer pressure (ESrfixed = .10). Compared with the sexual activity outcome, the effect size for descriptive norms (peer sexual risk behavior) for sexual risk behavior was smaller (ESrfixed = .11). Age, gender, peer type, and socio-cultural context significantly moderated these associations. Additional analyses of longitudinal studies suggested that selection effects were stronger than socialization effects. These findings offer empirical support for the conceptual distinction between three types of peer norms and hold important implications for theory, research, and intervention strategies.

Keywords

adolescence, meta-analysis, peers, sexual activity and risk behavior, social norms, Taverne

Citation

van de Bongardt, D, Reitz, E, Sandfort, T & Dekovic, M 2015, 'A Meta-Analysis of the Relations Between Three Types of Peer Norms and Adolescent Sexual Behavior', Personality and Social Psychology Review, vol. 19, no. 3, pp. 203–234. https://doi.org/10.1177/1088868314544223