Explaining the association between gender and substance use among American Indian adolescents: An application of power-control theory

Citation

Eitle, Tamela McNulty & Eitle, David (2015). Explaining the association between gender and substance use among American Indian adolescents: An application of power-control theory. Sociological Perspectives. vol. 58 (4) pp. 686-710

Abstract

This study evaluates the utility of Hagan's power-control theory for explaining substance use behaviors for a sample of American Indian (AI) adolescent males and females. Consistent with the theory, we found that patriarchal family form and the affective bond between father and daughter were significant predictors of female substance use behaviors. Compared with results from an analysis of non-Hispanic (NH) whites, these results reveal the importance of testing generalist explanations of deviant behavior across racial and ethnic groups. Our findings encourage a more in-depth consideration of the gendered nature of work, its association with socialization and control in AI families, and its impact on gender differences in substance use and delinquent behaviors. © The Author(s) 2015.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1177%2F0731121415570394

Keyword(s)

adolescents American Indian gender patriarchal power-control substance use

Notes

Export Date: 4 March 2016

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Sociological Perspectives

Author(s)

Eitle, Tamela McNulty
Eitle, David

Year Published

2015

Volume Number

58

Issue Number

4

Pages

686-710

DOI

10.1177/0731121415570394

Reference ID

6948