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- Title
ROMANTIC PARTNERS' INFLUENCE ON MEN'S LIKELIHOOD OF ARREST IN EARLY ADULTHOOD.
- Authors
CAPALDI, DEBORAH M.; KIM, HYOUN K.; OWEN, LEE D.
- Abstract
Female romantic partners' influence on official crime occurrence for men across a 12-year period in early adulthood was examined within a comprehensive dynamic prediction model, including both social learning and social control predictors. We hypothesized that relationship stability, rather than attachment to partner, would be associated with reduced likelihood of crime, whereas women's antisocial behavior would be a risk factor, along with deviant peer association. Models were tested on a sample of at-risk men [the Oregon Youth Study (OYS)] using zero-inflated Poisson (ZIP) modeling predicting 1) arrest persistence (class and count) and 2) arrest onset class. The findings indicated that women's antisocial behavior was predictive of both onset and persistence of arrests for men and that deviant peer association was predictive of persistence. Relationship stability was protective against persistence.
- Subjects
PREDICTION of criminal behavior; YOUNG adults' conduct of life; PEER pressure; ATTACHMENT behavior; COUPLES; AT-risk people; CRIMINOLOGY
- Publication
Criminology, 2008, Vol 46, Issue 2, p267
- ISSN
0011-1384
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/j.1745-9125.2008.00110.x