Publication | Closed Access
Desistance in the Transition to Adulthood: The Roles of Marriage, Military, and Gender
58
Citations
32
References
2012
Year
Gender IdentityGender StudiesMilitary FamiliesSociologyJuvenile DelinquencyEducationMilitary SociologyMilitary FamilyNational Longitudinal SampleSocial TransitionSocial ChangeMilitary InvolvementDating ViolenceFeminist TheoryFamily FormationMarriageSocial SciencesInformal Social Control
Research is needed on desistance from crime comparatively by gender. This research uses a national longitudinal sample of youth transitioning to adulthood. Drawing on Sampson and Laub's Age-Graded Theory of Informal Social Control, social bonds found in marriage and military involvement are examined to determine if they decrease delinquency over time. The results for the full sample revealed that marriage but not military involvement led to desistance. However, gender sub-sample analyses further showed military enlistment led females, but not males, to desist from crime. Implications and future research aims are discussed.
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