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Family and Juvenile Delinquency

NCJ Number
85918
Journal
Sociological Quarterly Volume: 23 Issue: 3 Dated: (Summer 1982) Pages: 301-319
Author(s)
W R Gove; R D Crutchfield
Date Published
1982
Length
19 pages
Annotation
This paper examines the effect of various 'family variables' on the etiology of juvenile delinquency.
Abstract
These self-report data are unique in that they are from reports by parents of their child's behavior, the nature of the child's life at home, and parental perceptions of their relationship with the child. How the family and delinquency literature fit into control theory's conceptualization of the importance of a child's attachment to the family as a determinant of delinquency is evaluated. Variables measuring (1) family structure, (2) poor parental characteristics, (3) household characteristics, and (4) parent-child relationships are examined. The attachment variable was found to be the strongest predictor of delinquency and helps to 'interpret' the effects of other variables that are significantly related to delinquency. The variables that predict male delinquency were found to be different from those that predict female delinquency. Characteristics of the parents' marriage play an important role for boys, while misbehavior of girls is more strongly predicted by variables measuring parent-child interaction and parental control. (Author abstract)