NCJ Number
              153940
          Journal
  Child Development Volume: 65 Dated: (1994) Pages: 523-540
Date Published
  1994
Length
              18 pages
          Annotation
              This paper reanalyzes data from the Gluecks' classic study of 500 delinquents and 500 nondelinquents reared in low-income neighborhoods of central Boston.
          Abstract
              Based on a general theory of informal social control, the authors propose a two-step hypothesis that links structure and process: family poverty inhibits family processes of informal social control, in turn increasing the likelihood of juvenile delinquency. The results support the theory by showing that erratic, threatening, and harsh discipline, low supervision, and weak parent-child attachment mediate the effects of poverty and other structural factors on delinquency. The authors also address the potential confounding role of parental and childhood disposition. Although difficult children who display early antisocial tendencies do disrupt family management, as do antisocial and unstable parents, mediating processes of informal social control still explain a large share of variance in adolescent delinquency. Overall, the results underscore the indirect effects of structural contexts like family poverty on adolescent delinquency within disadvantaged populations.  Implications for current debates on race, crime, and the "underclass" in urban America are discussed. 4 tables, 1 figure, and 36 references