Risk factors for adolescent
perpetration of or victimization by dating violence stem from different levels
of adolescents' social ecologies, including the family, individual, and peer
domains. However, these multiple risk factors have not been fully integrated
into a single comprehensive model of dating violence development.
The present
study examined prospective links between exposure to family violence in
pre-adolescence; pro-violent beliefs, aggression, deviant peer affiliation, and
aggression toward opposite-sex peers in early adolescence and dating violence
in late adolescence. Using a longitudinal study of 461 youth (51 % female;
80 % African American, 19 % Caucasian, 1 % other ethnicities),
path modeling evaluated a theoretically developed dual pathway model involving
a general violence pathway and an early romantic aggression pathway. Each
pathway links exposure to family violence in pre-adolescence with early
adolescent pro-violent beliefs and/or aggressive behavior.
In both pathways,
pro-violent beliefs may reinforce aggressive behaviors between same-sex and
opposite-sex peers, as well as strengthen bonds with deviant peers. In the last
part of both pathways, aggressive behavior and peer deviance in early
adolescence may contribute directly to late adolescent dating violence
perpetration and victimization. The findings provided support for both
pathways, as well as sex differences in the model.
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- 1Department of Psychology, University of Miami, 5665 Ponce de Leon Blvd, Coral Gables, FL, 33146, USA, anjana.madan@gmail.com.
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