从结构时间使用到情境规则打破——青少年时间使用与人-环境互动分析

IF 2 3区 社会学 Q1 CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY
Alberto Chrysoulakis, A. Ivert, M. Levander
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引用次数: 0

摘要

虽然与同伴的无监督和无组织的社交活动与犯罪有关,但人们对它在多大程度上适合青少年的日常活动知之甚少;也就是说,它们的一般结构时间使用。此外,情境行为理论的研究表明,对于犯罪倾向较高的人来说,非结构化的社交活动更容易增加违反规则行为的可能性。因此,结构化的时间利用可以解释非结构化的社交模式,而犯罪倾向可以解释为什么在这种情况下,一些人的违规行为风险会增加。本研究旨在将这三个方面联系起来,并研究:(i)青少年如何倾向于组织他们的时间使用,(ii)如果他们的结构性时间使用不同地将他们置于非结构化社交中,以及(iii)是否一些青少年在非结构化社交中由于他们的道德(作为他们犯罪倾向的一部分)而增加了违反规则行为的风险,同时也考虑到他们的结构性时间使用。以瑞典512名16岁青少年为样本,采用基于时空预算数据和自述问卷的潜类分析方法,分析了时间使用和道德行为。多层线性概率模型被用来研究违反规则的行为是如何从个人道德和非结构化社交之间的相互作用中产生的,同时也考虑了结构化时间的使用。结果表明,在确定的潜在阶层中,私下而非公开进行非结构化社交的可能性是不同的。总的来说,青少年在非结构化的社交活动中违反规则行为的风险更高,与结构化的时间使用无关。在这项研究中,这些行为主要包括饮酒。然而,对于道德水平较低的青少年来说,这种风险更高。青少年的时间使用可以解释犯罪的一般模式,但解释违反规则的行为需要了解人与环境之间的相互作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
From structural time use to situational rule-breaking: Analysing adolescents’ time use and the person-setting interaction
While unsupervised and unstructured socialising with peers is associated with delinquency, less is known about to what extent it fits within adolescents’ daily routine activities; that is, their general, structural time use. Furthermore, research informed by the situational action theory shows that unstructured socialising increases the probability of rule-breaking acts more for individuals with higher crime propensity. Hence, structural time use might explain patterns of unstructured socialising, and crime propensity might explain why some are at an increased risk of committing rule-breaking acts during such situations. The present study aims to connect these three aspects and examine: (i) how adolescents tend to structure their time use, (ii) if their structural time use differentially places them in unstructured socialising, and (iii) whether some adolescents during unstructured socialising run an elevated risk of committing rule-breaking acts due to their morality (as part of their crime propensity) while also taking their structural time use into account. Using a sample of 512 adolescents (age 16) in Sweden, time use and morality are analysed using latent class analysis based on space-time budget data and a self-report questionnaire. Multilevel linear probability models are utilised to examine how rule-breaking acts result from an interaction between an individual’s morality and unstructured socialising, also taking structural time use into account. Results show that the likelihood of unstructured socialising in private but not in public is different across identified latent classes. Adolescents, in general, run an elevated risk of rule-breaking acts during unstructured socialising, irrespective of structural time use. In this study, these acts consist mainly of alcohol consumption. However, the risk is higher for adolescents with lower morality. Adolescents’ time use may account for a general pattern of delinquency, but accounting for rule-breaking acts requires knowledge of the interaction between person and setting.
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来源期刊
European Journal of Criminology
European Journal of Criminology CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY-
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
5.30%
发文量
28
期刊介绍: The European Journal of Criminology is a refereed journal published by SAGE publications and the European Society of Criminology. It provides a forum for research and scholarship on crime and criminal justice institutions. The journal published high quality articles using varied approaches, including discussion of theory, analysis of quantitative data, comparative studies, systematic evaluation of interventions, and study of institutions of political process. The journal also covers analysis of policy, but not description of policy developments. Priority is given to articles that are relevant to the wider Europe (within and beyond the EU) although findings may be drawn from other parts of the world.
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