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On the relationships between gender, power control, self-control, and crime
Authors:Brenda Sims Blackwell  Alex R Piquero
Institution:a Department of Criminal Justice, Georgia State University, 1236 Urban Life Bldg., P.O. Box 4018, Atlanta, GA 30303-4018, United States
b Center for Studies in Criminology & Law, University of Florida, 201 Walker Hall, P.O. Box 115950, Gainesville, FL 32611-5950, United States
Abstract:This article bridges the gap between two theories that attempt to explain the gender - crime relationship. Power-control theory posits that power relationships of parents in the public sphere are reflected in their relationship at home. Different kinds of households are thus distinguished by degrees of patriarchy. Differential socialization generates gender differences in crime across households. Gottfredson and Hirschi's general theory purports that low self-control explains all crime across all groups, yet little research explored the link between low self-control and crime both among, as well as between, genders. Linking low self-control and power-control theories, this study examined the relationships gender, power-control, self-control, and crime. Results indicated that while low self-control explained both male and female criminality, the effect of parenting on the development of low self-control was complex; males and females differentially responded to parents' control. The gender-based processes that impact the development of self-control should further be explored.
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