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Is a Risky Lifestyle Always “Risky”? The Interaction Between Individual Propensity and Lifestyle Risk in Adolescent Offending: A Test in Two Urban Samples
85
Citations
34
References
2008
Year
Substance UsePsychosocial DeterminantUrban SamplesEducationAdolescenceLifestyle RiskPsychologyPublic HealthBehavioral SciencesRisky LifestyleAdolescent PsychologyPsychosocial FactorAdolescent DevelopmentSubstance AbuseAdolescent OffendingAddictionSociologyJuvenile DelinquencyRisk Decisions
This study examines the effects on adolescent offending of lifestyle risk and the individual propensity to offend. It is assumed that lifestyle risk will have a more important effect on offending for those individuals with high levels of individual propensity, whereas for individuals with low levels of individual propensity it is assumed that a risky lifestyle will not, or will only marginally, influence their involvement in offending. The data are drawn from two different samples of young adolescents in Antwerp, Belgium ( N = 2,486), and Halmstad, Sweden ( N = 1,003). The data provide strong support for the hypothesis that the effect of lifestyle risk is dependent on the strength or weakness of individual propensity, indicating that lifestyle risk has a stronger effect on delinquency for individuals with a high propensity to offend. The similarity of the results across two independent samples suggests the findings are stable.
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