Even when controlling for high levels of delinquent peers, gang youth differ from their nongang counterparts on a variety of attitudinal and behavioral measures. Researchers have argued that differences can be attributed to the group processes present in the gang setting. This study explores the extent to which differences between youth in a gang and those in a delinquent group can be explained by Bandura’s social cognitive theory. Much of the prior research in this arena has relied on cross-sectional data; in this study, we expand on this prior research using fixed-effects modeling strategies with a multi-site panel of youth. The results comparing time periods when youth were in a gang versus a delinquent peer group indicate that gang-invo...
The relationship between self-reported gang involvement and self-reported delinquency has been confi...
Purpose. Using social dominance theory, the primary aim of this study was to examine the attitudes ...
Youth gangs are a universal phenomenon attracting increasing attention; the criminal and antisocial ...
Research has noted the existence of a loose and dynamic gang structure. However, the psychological p...
Many Social factors are frequently used to explain juvenile delinquency and the emergence and persis...
Previous research consistently shows that youth gang members are responsible for committing a dispro...
Thornberry, Krohn, Lizotte, and Chard-Wierschem's (1993) introduced three models to account for why ...
A consistent finding in delinquency research is that gang membership is strongly associated with inc...
There is a growth in literature on the presence of gangs in metropolitan areas across the UK (e.g., ...
Purpose. Using social dominance theory, the primary aim of this study was to examine the attitudes ...
This article expands upon the limited literature on the relationship between youth motivations for j...
An apparently common assumption about juvenile gangs is that they are composed of individuals who ar...
The high prevalence of violent offending amongst gang-involved youth has been established in the lit...
In introducing this Special Issue on gangs, we overview the thrust of its papers, demonstrating how ...
This project attempts to clarify the relationships between gang membership, crime, and criminality. ...
The relationship between self-reported gang involvement and self-reported delinquency has been confi...
Purpose. Using social dominance theory, the primary aim of this study was to examine the attitudes ...
Youth gangs are a universal phenomenon attracting increasing attention; the criminal and antisocial ...
Research has noted the existence of a loose and dynamic gang structure. However, the psychological p...
Many Social factors are frequently used to explain juvenile delinquency and the emergence and persis...
Previous research consistently shows that youth gang members are responsible for committing a dispro...
Thornberry, Krohn, Lizotte, and Chard-Wierschem's (1993) introduced three models to account for why ...
A consistent finding in delinquency research is that gang membership is strongly associated with inc...
There is a growth in literature on the presence of gangs in metropolitan areas across the UK (e.g., ...
Purpose. Using social dominance theory, the primary aim of this study was to examine the attitudes ...
This article expands upon the limited literature on the relationship between youth motivations for j...
An apparently common assumption about juvenile gangs is that they are composed of individuals who ar...
The high prevalence of violent offending amongst gang-involved youth has been established in the lit...
In introducing this Special Issue on gangs, we overview the thrust of its papers, demonstrating how ...
This project attempts to clarify the relationships between gang membership, crime, and criminality. ...
The relationship between self-reported gang involvement and self-reported delinquency has been confi...
Purpose. Using social dominance theory, the primary aim of this study was to examine the attitudes ...
Youth gangs are a universal phenomenon attracting increasing attention; the criminal and antisocial ...