“You're Going Out with Who?”: Peer Group Influences on Adolescent Romantic Relationships
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One of the hallmarks of American adolescence is the broadening and intensification of peer relationships (Brown, 1990; Hartup, 1993). During this life stage young people typically expand the time spent with peers, rely more on peers for advice and support, and work out their identities and aspirations within the context of peer relationships. The peer system itself expands, most notably with a new form of dyadic association: romantic relationships. To a limited extent, researchers have explored various facets of this new form of relationship: its connection to family structure and processes, its impact on the emotional and sexual lives of young people, its associations with participants' personal characteristics such as sex role orientation or attachment style, and its role in the social mandate of mate selection and marriage. Rarely, however, have researchers given concurrent attention to two other critical components of adolescent romantic relationships: the social context in which they are primarily embedded, that is, the social world of peers and the changes or metamorphosis that they manifest across adolescence. Both of these components are addressed in several other contributions to this volume, but they are the focal interests of this chapter.