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An Empirical Test of a General Theory of Crime: A Four-Nation Comparative Study of Self-Control and the Prediction of Deviance
464
Citations
60
References
2001
Year
Four-nation Comparative StudyPsychosocial DeterminantMultidimensional Self-control MeasureEducationPsychometricsAdolescenceSelf-monitoringSocial SciencesPsychologyDevelopmental PsychologySelf-control MeasureEmpirical TestPsychiatryViolent CrimeAdolescent DevelopmentGeneral TheoryCriminal JusticeSocial BehaviorSociologySelf-control AccountsAggressionPsychopathologyCriminal Behavior
The current investigation examined the psychometric properties of Grasmick et al.'s self-control measure and its relationship with deviance on large, representative adolescent samples ( N = 8,417) from Hungary, the Netherlands, Switzerland, and the United States. Important findings indicate that (1) the self-control measure is multidimensional; (2) the self-control measure is tenable for males, females, five different age groups (15-, 16-, 17-, 18-, and 19-year-olds), and adolescents from four different countries; (3) deviance as assessed by the Normative Deviance Scale (NDS) can be reliably measured in different countries; (4) self-control accounts for 10 to 16 percent of the total variance explained in different types of deviance and for 20 percent in total deviance; and (5) developmental processes involving self-control and deviance are largely invariant by national context. The investigation provides further support for the multidimensional self-control measure and its relationship with deviance independent of national context.
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