Delinquency, parental involvement, early adult criminality, and sex: Evidence of moderated mediation.

Glenn D Walters
Author Information
  1. Glenn D Walters: Department of Criminal Justice, Kutztown University, Kutztown, PA 19530-0730, USA. walters@kutztown.edu

Abstract

One purpose of this study was to determine whether parental involvement, measured in late adolescence, mediates the relationship between delinquency in mid-adolescence and crime in early adulthood. This study's second purpose was to ascertain whether this relationship is moderated by sex, such that late adolescent parental involvement mediates the delinquency-crime relationship in females but not in males. A secondary analysis of data provided by 579 (272 males, 307 females) members of the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth-Child (NLSYC) was conducted in an effort to evaluate the possibility of moderated mediation in the relationship between delinquency at age 16, parental involvement at age 18, and criminality at age 24. Moderated mediation analysis, path analysis, and causal mediation analysis revealed the presence of a conditional indirect relationship between delinquency, parental involvement, and adult crime moderated by sex. These results are consistent with views on cumulative disadvantage and gendered pathways to crime.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Adolescent
Age Factors
Antisocial Personality Disorder
Communication
Crime
Cross-Sectional Studies
Female
Gender Identity
Humans
Juvenile Delinquency
Longitudinal Studies
Male
Models, Psychological
Parent-Child Relations
Parenting
Risk Factors
United States
Young Adult

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0involvementparentalrelationshipmediationmoderatedanalysisdelinquencycrimeagepurposewhetherlatemediatesearlysexfemalesmalescriminalityModeratedadultDelinquencyOnestudydeterminemeasuredadolescencemid-adolescenceadulthoodstudy'ssecondascertainadolescentdelinquency-crimesecondarydataprovided579272307membersNationalLongitudinalSurveyYouth-ChildNLSYCconductedeffortevaluatepossibility161824pathcausalrevealedpresenceconditionalindirectresultsconsistentviewscumulativedisadvantagegenderedpathwayssex:EvidenceParental

Similar Articles

Cited By (2)