This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Deviant Behavior on 2020, available online: https://doi.org/10.1080/01639625.2019.1597321.The goal of this study is to present and validate a simple method for accounting for peer selection on offending based on a respondent’s self-reported preferences for friends who engage in criminal behavior. Using primary panel data (n=611), having a preference for peers who offend (the measure of peer selection) relates positively and significantly to offending behavior. The selection measure, which carries the advantage of being closely aligned to criminological theory, renders the peer offending / personal offending relationship nonsignificant. Our selection variables als...
Both developmental and propensity theories root the etiology of chronic offending in factors other t...
This paper studies whether conformism behavior affects individual outcomes in crime. We present a so...
Contains fulltext : 155628.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)In this paper...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Deviant Behavior on 28...
This is a post-peer-review, pre-copyedit version of an article published in the Journal of Quantitat...
Research Summary: Offender decision-making generally occurs in social context. In this article, we d...
The relationship between association with deviant peers and offending is a longstanding interest in ...
The strong correlation between measures of personal and peer deviance occurs with near “law-like” re...
This article studies whether conformism behavior affects individual outcomes in crime. We present a ...
Both developmental and propensity theories root the etiology of chronic offending in factors other t...
Though scholars recognize that peer-based risks for offending are especially robust, a handful of re...
In adolescence, peer influences are important in the development of antisocial behavior. Previous em...
This article studies whether conformism behavior affects individual outcomes in crime. We present a ...
Criminologists often allude to 'peer influence' in explanations of crime and delinquency, but the me...
This chapter details some important literature related to peers, delinquency, and development, offer...
Both developmental and propensity theories root the etiology of chronic offending in factors other t...
This paper studies whether conformism behavior affects individual outcomes in crime. We present a so...
Contains fulltext : 155628.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)In this paper...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Deviant Behavior on 28...
This is a post-peer-review, pre-copyedit version of an article published in the Journal of Quantitat...
Research Summary: Offender decision-making generally occurs in social context. In this article, we d...
The relationship between association with deviant peers and offending is a longstanding interest in ...
The strong correlation between measures of personal and peer deviance occurs with near “law-like” re...
This article studies whether conformism behavior affects individual outcomes in crime. We present a ...
Both developmental and propensity theories root the etiology of chronic offending in factors other t...
Though scholars recognize that peer-based risks for offending are especially robust, a handful of re...
In adolescence, peer influences are important in the development of antisocial behavior. Previous em...
This article studies whether conformism behavior affects individual outcomes in crime. We present a ...
Criminologists often allude to 'peer influence' in explanations of crime and delinquency, but the me...
This chapter details some important literature related to peers, delinquency, and development, offer...
Both developmental and propensity theories root the etiology of chronic offending in factors other t...
This paper studies whether conformism behavior affects individual outcomes in crime. We present a so...
Contains fulltext : 155628.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)In this paper...