This article examines how friends' involvement in crime influences such involvement in those around them, as offenders or victims, and the extent to which such friendship effects vary with contact frequency, friendship intimacy, and geographical proximity. To test our hypotheses we used four waves from the Dutch panel survey CrimeNL, which includes ego-centered network measures in each wave for respondents aged between 16 and 45. To test our hypotheses, fixed-effects panel models were employed. The results show that living in close proximity to delinquent friends increases people’s own risk of offending, and daily interaction with these friends decreases the risk of victimization. Victimization is also communicated among friends in their da...
Positive association of relevant characteristics is a widespread pattern among adolescent friends. A...
The present study examines both the unique and the combined role of best friends’ delinquency and pe...
Erdmann A, Reinecke J. What Influences the Victimization of High-Level Offenders? A Dual Trajectory ...
This article examines how friends' involvement in crime influences such involvement in those around ...
In this paper, we examine the similarity between friends with respect to experiences with crime amon...
Contains fulltext : 90384.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)The current st...
This study examines whether having delinquent friends interacts with other peer-related variables in...
The current study examined the role of friends ’ delinquency, in terms of violent and property offen...
The aim of this paper is to investigate whether weak ties play an important role in explaining crimi...
This paper investigates the influence of friends on crime, using data I collected among the homeless...
Delinquent behaviour of boys and girls The (anti) social capital of friendship-relations What influ...
We combine routine activity theory, lifestyle-victimization theory, and a social network perspective...
This article focuses on two research questions. To what degree is similarity in delinquent behaviour...
Delinquent behaviour of boys and girls The (anti) social capital of friendship-relations What influe...
Erdmann A. The Impact of Peer Groups and Routine Activities on the Victim-Offender Overlap. Evidence...
Positive association of relevant characteristics is a widespread pattern among adolescent friends. A...
The present study examines both the unique and the combined role of best friends’ delinquency and pe...
Erdmann A, Reinecke J. What Influences the Victimization of High-Level Offenders? A Dual Trajectory ...
This article examines how friends' involvement in crime influences such involvement in those around ...
In this paper, we examine the similarity between friends with respect to experiences with crime amon...
Contains fulltext : 90384.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)The current st...
This study examines whether having delinquent friends interacts with other peer-related variables in...
The current study examined the role of friends ’ delinquency, in terms of violent and property offen...
The aim of this paper is to investigate whether weak ties play an important role in explaining crimi...
This paper investigates the influence of friends on crime, using data I collected among the homeless...
Delinquent behaviour of boys and girls The (anti) social capital of friendship-relations What influ...
We combine routine activity theory, lifestyle-victimization theory, and a social network perspective...
This article focuses on two research questions. To what degree is similarity in delinquent behaviour...
Delinquent behaviour of boys and girls The (anti) social capital of friendship-relations What influe...
Erdmann A. The Impact of Peer Groups and Routine Activities on the Victim-Offender Overlap. Evidence...
Positive association of relevant characteristics is a widespread pattern among adolescent friends. A...
The present study examines both the unique and the combined role of best friends’ delinquency and pe...
Erdmann A, Reinecke J. What Influences the Victimization of High-Level Offenders? A Dual Trajectory ...