Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
882768 | Journal of Criminal Justice | 2014 | 7 Pages |
•Sex moderated peer mediation of the externalizing-delinquency relationship•Externalizing behavior predicted delinquency in both boys and girls•Perceived peer pressure mediated externalizing-delinquency in males•Perceived peer pressure did not mediate externalizing-delinquency in females•Results support the gendered pathways to delinquency model
PurposeThe current study sought to determine whether sex moderated peer mediation of the externalizing-delinquency relationship as part of a larger test of the gendered pathways theory of crime.MethodsData gathered from 4,144 (2,079 males and 2,065 females) members of the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth-Child sample were subjected to simple correlational and moderated mediation analysis.ResultsExternalizing behavior and delinquency correlated equally in boys and girls but in testing a full moderated mediation model it was discovered that sex moderated the mediating effect of perceived peer pressure on the externalizing–delinquency relationship. Whereas externalizing behavior predicted delinquency in both boys and girls, perceived peer pressure only mediated the externalizing-delinquency relationship in boys.ConclusionsThese results support the gendered pathways to delinquency model to the extent that the relationship between childhood externalizing behavior and delinquency was mediated by perceived peer pressure in males but not females. The implications of these results for theoretical refinement of the gendered pathways approach and crime prevention and intervention are discussed.