TY - JOUR PY - 1989// TI - Impulsiveness, orientation to institutional authority, and gender as factors in self-reported delinquency among Australian adolescents JO - Personality and individual differences A1 - Rigby, Ken A1 - Mak, Anita S. A1 - Slee, Phillip T. SP - 689 EP - 692 VL - 10 IS - 6 N2 - Notwithstanding the current fashion in criminological theory to attribute deliquency to contemporary environmental or organisational factors, it is argued that individual personality and attitudinal characteristics are also predictive of delinquent behaviour. Young male and female adolescent schoolchildren (n = 115) attending an Australian high school answered questionnaires containing reliable measures of self-reported delinquent behaviour, impulsiveness, and attitudes towards institutional authority. In a multiple regression analysis, [beta] coefficients for impulsiveness (0.46), gender (-0.27) and attitude to institutional authority (-0.18) indicated that reported delinquent behaviour was independently and significantly associated with being impulsive, male and negatively disposed towards institutional authority. The results are viewed as consistent with an interactionist perspective on delinquent behaviour, according to which individual, as well as environmental factors need to be taken into account.

Language: en

LA - en SN - 0191-8869 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0191-8869(89)90228-6 ID - ref1 ER -