Race, gender, single-mother households, and delinquency: A further test of power-control theory

Citation

Mack, K. Y. & Leiber, M. J. (2005). Race, gender, single-mother households, and delinquency: A further test of power-control theory. Youth and Society. vol. 37 (2) pp. 115-144

Abstract

Using power-control theory as the theoretical framework, the present study examines the gender gap in delinquency for White and African American youth from single-mother households. The research is driven by the need to focus more attention on understanding how delinquency theories apply across different racial groups. Results from both bivariate and multivariate analyses indicate that, with few exceptions, there are significant gender gaps in delinquency for both White and African American youth. Therefore, it appears that gender, more than race, influences nonserious delinquency among youth from single-mother families. These findings suggest that further development of power-control theory may lie in rethinking the classification of single-mother households as inherently balanced, or egalitarian, in nature.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0044118X04271022

Keyword(s)

Crime & delinquency

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Youth and Society

Author(s)

Mack, K. Y.
Leiber, M. J.

Year Published

2005

Volume Number

37

Issue Number

2

Pages

115-144

DOI

10.1177/0044118X04271022

Reference ID

455