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Direct Parental Controls and Delinquency

NCJ Number
112004
Journal
Criminology Volume: 26 Issue: 2 Dated: (May 1988) Pages: 263-285
Author(s)
L E Wells; J H Rankin
Date Published
1988
Length
23 pages
Annotation
This study reconceptualizes the term 'direct control' to include specific components which indicate an impact on delinquency.
Abstract
Until recently, 'direct controls' by parents have been dismissed by delinquency researchers as theoretically and empirically unimportant. Although prior research indicates that various measures of direct parental controls (e.g. the amount of time spent interacting with parents) are related to delinquency, the correlations are uniformly weak and often not significant. When the term 'direct control' is reconceptualized to include normative regulation, monitoring, and punishment, however, results show as great an impact on delinquency as that of 'indirect controls' or parental 'attachments.' Also, the results suggest that the form of the relation between direct controls and delinquency is not simple, direct, and linear. Depending on which specific component of direct control is examined, its relationship to delinquency may be either linear or nonlinear, positive or inverse. For example, more vigorous punishment is associated with higher levels of delinquency, while medium strictness results in the lowest levels of delinquency. 4 figures, 1 table, 5 footnotes, and 45 references. (Author abstract modified)