During adolescence, youths
develop attitudes about the justice system. Although there is consistent
evidence that personal experiences with legal actors contribute to attitudes
toward the justice system, adolescents' attitudes may also be influenced
vicariously through their friends' experiences with the justice system.
Using
data from a sample of 1,216 first-time male adolescent offenders, the present
study examines how attitudes toward the justice system develop over 24 months
following the adolescent's first arrest.
Even after accounting for personal
justice system experiences, including self-reported offending, time on the
streets, and contacts with the police, results indicate that adolescents with
friends who were arrested report more negative attitudes toward the justice
system than those without friends who were arrested.
Further, experiencing a
friend's arrest has a larger impact on the attitudes of youths who are
experiencing it for the first time.
We provide evidence that attitudes toward
the justice system are a product of accumulated social experiences-both
personal and vicarious-with the justice system.
Purchase full article at: http://goo.gl/DnLnFD
By: Fine A, Cavanagh C, Donley S, Steinberg L, Frick PJ, Cauffman E.
More at: https://twitter.com/hiv_insight
No comments:
Post a Comment