The study used a series of regression models to examine self-reported data from 503 male inmates and 220 men (N = 723) they knew from the community who have never been arrested. The study found that disputatiousness accounted for a substantial portion of the relationship between victimization and offending (i.e., inmate status). Disputatiousness also mediated the relationships between victimization and frequent intoxication, low self-control, and honor-based attitudes. Low self-control and heavy alcohol use accounted for a substantial portion of the relationship between offending and disputatiousness. Disputatiousness and victimization were associated with a history of assaultive offenses but not a history of robbery. The study's overall conclusion is that the tendency to become involved in verbal conflicts partly explained high victimization rates among male offenders; and among men who lacked self-control, were frequently intoxicated, and had strong concerns about protecting their honor. (publisher abstract modified)
Downloads
Similar Publications
- Delegating Discretion: Quasi Experiments on District Court Decision Making
- Gene—Environment Interplay and Delinquent Involvement: Evidence of Direct, Indirect, and Interactive Effects
- Patterns of Intimate Partner Violence and Their Associations with Physical Health, Psychological Distress, and Substance Use