
@article{ref1,
title="Cultivating conformists or raising rebels? Connecting parental control and autonomy support to adolescent delinquency",
journal="Journal of research on adolescence",
year="2017",
author="Brauer, Jonathan R.",
volume="27",
number="2",
pages="452-470",
abstract="This study investigates short-term and long-term associations between parenting in early adolescence and delinquency throughout adolescence using data from the National Longitudinal Surveys. Multilevel longitudinal Poisson regressions show that behavioral control, psychological control, and decision-making autonomy in early adolescence (ages 10-11) are associated with delinquency trajectories throughout adolescence (ages 10-17). Path analyses reveal support for three mediation hypotheses. Parental monitoring (behavioral control) is negatively associated with delinquency in the short term and operates partly through changes in self-control. Parental pressure (psychological control) shows immediate and long-lasting associations with delinquency through changes in self-control and delinquent peer pressures. Decision-making autonomy is negatively associated with delinquency in the long term, yet may exacerbate delinquency in early adolescence by increasing exposure to delinquent peers.<br><br>© 2016 The Author. Journal of Research on Adolescence © 2016 Society for Research on Adolescence.<p /> <p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="1050-8392",
doi="10.1111/jora.12283",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jora.12283"
}