Journal article
The Conditional Effect of Parental Drug Use on Parental Attachment and Adolescent Drug Use: Social Control and Social Development Model Perspectives
Journal of child & adolescent substance abuse, Vol.16(3), pp.63-87
06/25/2007
Handle:
https://hdl.handle.net/2376/116315
Abstract
The effect of parental deviance on adolescent deviance has been a source of considerable debate in the criminological literature. Classic theoretical explanations of the relationships between parental and adolescent deviance posit additive effects of parental deviance on youth behavior. Proponents of the Social Development Model have hypothesized that parental deviance interacts with parent-child attachment to increase adolescent antisocial behavior. Using data from a household survey of drug use in Washington State, we find that youth who arestrongly attached to fathers in households where parents frequently use drugs are more likely to use both licit and illicit drugs than adolescents strongly bonded to nondrug-using parents. Adolescents' perceptions of drug availability and associations with drug-using peers are also significantly higher among youth strongly attached to fathers in households where parent drug use is present.
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Details
- Title
- The Conditional Effect of Parental Drug Use on Parental Attachment and Adolescent Drug Use: Social Control and Social Development Model Perspectives
- Creators
- Laurie A Drapela - Department of Political Science and Criminal Justice , Washington State University VancouverClayton Mosher - Washington State University Vancouver
- Publication Details
- Journal of child & adolescent substance abuse, Vol.16(3), pp.63-87
- Academic Unit
- Criminal Justice and Criminology, Department of; Sociology, Department of
- Publisher
- Taylor & Francis Group
- Identifiers
- 99900547940401842
- Language
- English
- Resource Type
- Journal article