DELINQUENT PEERS, BELIEFS, AND DELINQUENT BEHAVIOR: A LONGITUDINAL TEST OF INTERACTIONAL THEORY*
暂无分享,去创建一个
S. J. Jang | Alan J. Lizotte | Marvin D. Krohn | Margaret Farnworth | Terence P. Thornberry | M. Krohn | A. Lizotte | T. P. Thornberry | M. Farnworth | Sung Joon Jang | T. Thornberry
[1] W. W. Minor,et al. Neutralization as a Hardening Process: Considerations in the Modeling of Change , 1984 .
[2] R. Matsueda. Testing control theory and differential association: A causal modeling approach. , 1982 .
[3] R. Agnew. SOCIAL CONTROL THEORY AND DELINQUENCY: A LONGITUDINAL TEST , 1985 .
[4] Ronald L. Akers,et al. Social Learning Theory and Adolescent Cigarette Smoking: A Longitudinal Study , 1985 .
[5] Michael R. Gottfredson,et al. Age and the Explanation of Crime , 1983, American Journal of Sociology.
[6] W. W. Minor,et al. Techniques of Neutralization: a Reconceptualization and Empirical Examination , 1981 .
[7] R. Matsueda. The Dynamics of Moral Beliefs and Minor Deviance , 1989 .
[8] H. L. Voss. Differential Association and Reported Delinquent Behavior: A Replication , 1964 .
[9] R. Paternoster. Examining Three-Wave Deterrence Models: A Question of Temporal Order and Specification , 1988 .
[10] David Huizinga,et al. Are there multiple paths to delinquency , 1991 .
[11] T. Dishion,et al. CONTRIBUTIONS OF FAMILIES AND PEERS TO DELINQUENCY , 1985 .
[12] J. Greenley,et al. Competing theories of marijuana use: a longitudinal study. , 1978, Journal of health and social behavior.
[13] A. Liska. Interpreting the Causal Structure of Differential Association Theory , 1969 .
[14] S. R. Burkett,et al. RELIGIOSITY, PEER ASSOCIATIONS, AND ADOLESCENT MARIJUANA USE: A PANEL STUDY OF UNDERLYING CAUSAL STRUCTURES* , 1987 .
[15] S. Menard,et al. Longitudinal and cross-sectional data collection and analysis in the study of crime and delinquency , 1990 .
[16] G. Jensen,et al. Parents, Peers, and Delinquent Action: A Test of the Differential Association Perspective , 1972, American Journal of Sociology.
[17] H. White,et al. LONGITUDINAL PREDICTORS OF SERIOUS SUBSTANCE USE AND DELINQUENCY , 1987 .
[18] M. Krohn,et al. Testing Interactional Theory: An Examination of Reciprocal Causal Relationships among Family, School, and Delinquency , 1991 .
[19] J. J. F. Short. Differential Association and Delinquency , 1957 .
[20] Beth Bjerregaard,et al. The consequences of respondent attrition in panel studies: A simulation based on the Rochester youth development study , 1993 .
[21] R. Meier,et al. Sanctions Peers, and Deviance: Preliminary Models Of A Social Control Process* , 1983 .
[22] D. Kandel. Homophily, Selection, and Socialization in Adolescent Friendships , 1978, American Journal of Sociology.
[23] R. Agnew. THE INTERACTIVE EFFECTS OF PEER VARIABLES ON DELINQUENCY , 1991 .
[24] G. Patterson,et al. The reinforcement of behavior in institutional settings. , 1966, Behaviour research and therapy.
[25] L. Lanza-Kaduce,et al. Social learning and deviant behavior: a specific test of a general theory. , 1979, American sociological review.
[26] Mark Warr,et al. THE INFLUENCE OF DELINQUENT PEERS: WHAT THEY THINK OR WHAT THEY DO?* , 1991 .
[27] Charles R. Tittle,et al. Modeling Sutherland's Theory of Differential Association: Toward an Empirical Clarification , 1986 .
[28] Robert Agnew,et al. A Longitudinal Test of Social Control Theory and Delinquency , 1991 .
[29] T. P. Thornberry,et al. TOWARD AN INTERACTIONAL THEORY OF DELINQUENCY , 1987 .