Criminological research suggests that informal sanctions like shaming may have a stronger influence on crime than do formal sanctions, but research has yet to examine whether anticipated shaming may mediate the relationship between crime and variables derived from dominant micro-level theories. The present paper argues that variables derived from learning, control, strain, and deterrence theories influence criminal offending via their effect on anticipated shaming. Using data collected from a sample of young adults, results from both tobit and path analyses suggest that the prospect of shaming among friends and family bears a stronger direct relation to criminal intent than do more commonly examined variables and that the effect of such var...
Deterrence studies have shown that perceived sanction risk is related to delinquent behaviour, indep...
Objectives The present study examines how individuals ’ sanction risk perceptions are shaped by neig...
Deterrence studies have shown that perceived sanction risk is related to delinquent behaviour, indep...
Criminological research suggests that informal sanctions like shaming may have a stronger influence ...
Research finds males to have a higher likelihood of offending than females. Dominant explanations of...
We address individual-level hypotheses from Braithwaite’s shaming theory using Russian survey data. ...
In the present study we advance previous research in deterrence theory by examining the perceived de...
Recently, Agnew has narrowed the focus of General Strain Theory by arguing certain factors must conv...
This paper discusses two aspects of Crime, Shame and Reintegration(Braithwaite, 1989) concerning the...
Stafford and Warr (1993) reconceptualized general and specific deterrence into a single theory in wh...
The primary aim of this study was to examine how early adolescents' anticipated guilt and shame befo...
Research has found that anticipated shame and guilt have a major effect on the likelihood of offendi...
In the recent controversy concerning therelationship between social class and criminality, thedistin...
This secondary analysis represents a cross-sectional quantitative test of Reintegrative Shaming Theo...
This paper discusses two aspects of Crime, Shame and Reintegration (Braithwaite, 1989) concerning t...
Deterrence studies have shown that perceived sanction risk is related to delinquent behaviour, indep...
Objectives The present study examines how individuals ’ sanction risk perceptions are shaped by neig...
Deterrence studies have shown that perceived sanction risk is related to delinquent behaviour, indep...
Criminological research suggests that informal sanctions like shaming may have a stronger influence ...
Research finds males to have a higher likelihood of offending than females. Dominant explanations of...
We address individual-level hypotheses from Braithwaite’s shaming theory using Russian survey data. ...
In the present study we advance previous research in deterrence theory by examining the perceived de...
Recently, Agnew has narrowed the focus of General Strain Theory by arguing certain factors must conv...
This paper discusses two aspects of Crime, Shame and Reintegration(Braithwaite, 1989) concerning the...
Stafford and Warr (1993) reconceptualized general and specific deterrence into a single theory in wh...
The primary aim of this study was to examine how early adolescents' anticipated guilt and shame befo...
Research has found that anticipated shame and guilt have a major effect on the likelihood of offendi...
In the recent controversy concerning therelationship between social class and criminality, thedistin...
This secondary analysis represents a cross-sectional quantitative test of Reintegrative Shaming Theo...
This paper discusses two aspects of Crime, Shame and Reintegration (Braithwaite, 1989) concerning t...
Deterrence studies have shown that perceived sanction risk is related to delinquent behaviour, indep...
Objectives The present study examines how individuals ’ sanction risk perceptions are shaped by neig...
Deterrence studies have shown that perceived sanction risk is related to delinquent behaviour, indep...