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Gang Membership Transitions and its Consequences: Exploring Changes Related to Joining and Leaving Gangs in Two Countries

NCJ Number
248873
Journal
European Journal of Criminology Volume: 12 Issue: 1 Dated: January 2015 Pages: 70-91
Author(s)
Frank M. Weerman; Terrence Thornberry; Terence Thornberry
Date Published
January 2015
Length
22 pages
Annotation

This study explored how gang membership transitions among adolescents are related to changes with regard to peers, conventional social bonds, and problem behavior.

Abstract

The data for this study came from two longitudinal studies, one conducted in the United States (the Rochester Youth Development Study) and one in the Netherlands (the NSCR School Study). In both countries, gang membership appears to be relatively short-lived, with 1 year as the modal length of gang membership. Also, in both countries, the results show a consistent pattern in which joining a gang is related to an increasing exposure to negative peer influences, a weakening of conventional bonds, and increasing levels of delinquency and substance use. Leaving a gang is associated with the opposite pattern of change. (Publisher abstract modified)