Same Routines,Different Effects: Gender,Leisure, and Young Offending |
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Authors: | Timothy Kang Julian Tanner Scot Wortley |
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Affiliation: | 1. tim.kang@utoronto.ca |
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Abstract: | The current study seeks to extend routine activity theory by examining how gender conditions the relationship between leisure activities and adolescent delinquency. Using OLS regression with a sample of high school students from Toronto (n = 2,209), we find that (1) engaging in more unstructured and unsupervised activities with peers is associated with delinquency more strongly for boys than for girls, but is associated with substance use equally across gender; (2) this pattern is likely due to gender differences in the locations or contexts of leisure activities; and (3) prosocial leisure activities are associated with less delinquency only for boys. In general, routine activity theory appears apt at explaining the substance use of boys and girls, but is less capable of explaining the property and violent offending of girls. We discuss our findings and their implications for the growing body of research extending routine activity theory to explain gender differences in delinquency. |
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Keywords: | gender leisure routine activity theory delinquency substance use |
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