Interpersonal Partner Relationships, Bonds to Children, and Informal Social Control among Persistent Male Offenders

Author:

Valdez Avelardo1,Nowotny Kathryn M2,Zhao Qian-Wei1,Cepeda Alice1

Affiliation:

1. University Southern California

2. University of Miami

Abstract

AbstractThis qualitative study applied a life course framework to characterize the nature of interpersonal partner relationships of Mexican American young adult men affiliated with street gangs during their adolescence. Data come from a 15-year longitudinal mixed-method cohort study conducted in San Antonio, Texas. We analyzed semi-structured interviews conducted with a subsample (n = 40) during the course of three face-to-face sessions to explore the men’s motivations, aspirations, and goals to lead conventional lives, despite their criminal justice involvement. Specifically, we focus on the complex nature of maintaining ties to children, the navigation of complicated family structures, the processes of seeking partners with economic resources, and on partnerships with criminal and delinquent partners. We document the complex interpersonal nature of these relationships as men contend with serial incarceration and their desires and motivations to desist from criminal behavior.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

National Institute on Drug Abuse

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Sociology and Political Science

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