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Birth order and youth delinquent behaviour testing the differential parental control hypothesis in a french representative sample
Authors:Laurent Bègue  Sebastian Roché
Affiliation:1. Laboratoire de Psychologie Sociale , Université Pierre Mendès–France , 1251, avenue Centrale, Domaine Universitaire, BP 47, F 38040, Grenoble, France Laurent.Begue@upmf-grenoble.fr;3. Institut d'Etudes Politiques , CERAT (CNRS) , Grenoble, France
Abstract:Studies on delinquent behaviour have frequently shown that firstborn children are less involved in delinquency than middle-born children. We suggest that differential parental control of the children depending on their ordinal position might account for this phenomenon. The study, carried out with a French representative sample (n=1129), indicated that firstborns were more supervised than middle-borns. Firstborns reported less minor offences and serious offences than middle-born children. However, when sibship size and parental supervision were controlled in a subsequent analysis of covariance, the effect of ordinal position on serious offences disappeared, whereas the birth-order effect on minor offences declined but remained significant. It is concluded that ordinal position plays a moderate role in delinquent behaviour and that this effect is partly induced by differential parental control.
Keywords:Delinquency  Birth Order Effect  Parental Supervision  Sibship Size  Ordinal Position
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