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Parental and Peer Influences on Adolescent Drug Use in Korea
Authors:Sunghyun Hwang  Ronald L. Akers
Affiliation:(1) Department of Information and Public Administration, 1-21 Gye-Dong, Jongno-Gu, Seoul, 110-800, South Korea;(2) Department of Criminology, Law and Society, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611, USA
Abstract:The analysis and findings reported here are from a self-report questionnaire survey of a sample of 1,035 high school students in Pusan, a metropolitan area of South Korea. Multiple regression and path analyses reveal that, for all types of drug behavior among these adolescents, the influence of parental variables was generally less than the influence of the peer variables. Even in South Korean society, where the stability and authority of the family is greater than in American society, peers have a greater influence than do parents on adolescents’ engaging in or refraining from deviant behavior. The findings conform more to the expectations of social learning theory than to those of social bonding theory, and generally replicate findings from research on adolescent drug use in the United States. Further research is clearly needed, but the findings here suggest that the social processes of substance use among adolescents and the theoretical explanations focusing on those processes are not confined to western societies.
Contact InformationRonald L. Akers (Corresponding author)Email: Phone: +1-352-3922230Fax: +1-352-3923584
Keywords:Adolescents  Drug use  Parental influence  Peer influence
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