Affiliation:
1. Malmö University, Sweden
2. National Council for Crime Prevention, Stockholm, Sweden
Abstract
In this article we examine whether different agents of socialization—family, school, and peers—are differentially associated with offending among different immigrant groups. Our expectation is to find that the association between delinquent friends and offending is stronger for first- and second-generation immigrants than for youths of native Swedish background. We use data from four nationally representative self-report studies of 21,504 adolescents with an average age of 15 years in Sweden. The results show that both first- and second-generation immigrants report committing more offenses than natives. The association is rather weak and the two predictors account for only a marginal amount of the variance in total offending. The results also show that the association between delinquent friends and offending is stronger for both first- and second-generation immigrants than for natives.
Subject
General Social Sciences,Sociology and Political Science,Social Sciences (miscellaneous)
Cited by
3 articles.
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