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The role of family and peer relations in adolescent antisocial behaviour: comparison of four ethnic groups

Authors :
Anne Marie Meijer
Inge B. Wissink
Maja Deković
Source :
Journal of Adolescence. 27:497-514
Publication Year :
2004
Publisher :
Wiley, 2004.

Abstract

The dominant theories about the development of antisocial behaviour during adolescence are based almost entirely on research conducted with mainstream, white, middle-class adolescents. The present study addresses this significant gap in the literature by examining whether the same model of family and peer influence on antisocial behaviour is applicable to adolescents belonging to different ethnic groups. The sample included 603 adolescents (318 females and 285 males) from four ethnic groups: 68% of adolescents were Dutch, 11% were Moroccan, 13% were Turkish and 8% were Surinamese. The questionnaires assessing antisocial behaviour, quality of parent-adolescent relationship and involvement with deviant peers were completed by adolescents individually at schools. Results show few ethnic differences in the mean level of the assessed constructs: adolescents from different ethnic groups show similar levels of antisocial behaviour, are to a similar degree satisfied with their relationships with parents, disclose as much information to them, and do not differ in their involvement with deviant peers. However, the associations of parent and peer relations with antisocial behaviour differed across the ethnic groups.

Details

ISSN :
10959254 and 01401971
Volume :
27
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Adolescence
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7108826324cc42179174c4171dfaa8cb