Arrested Friendships? Justice Involvement and Interpersonal Exclusion among Rural Youth

Objectives: We examine the impacts of adolescent arrest on friendship networks. In particular, we extend labeling theory by testing hypotheses for three potential mechanisms of interpersonal exclusion related to the stigma of arrest: rejection, withdrawal, and homophily. Method: We use longitudinal...

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Veröffentlicht in:The journal of research in crime and delinquency 2022-05, Vol.59 (3), p.365-409
Hauptverfasser: Jacobsen, Wade C., Ragan, Daniel T., Yang, Mei, Nadel, Emily L., Feinberg, Mark E.
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container_end_page 409
container_issue 3
container_start_page 365
container_title The journal of research in crime and delinquency
container_volume 59
creator Jacobsen, Wade C.
Ragan, Daniel T.
Yang, Mei
Nadel, Emily L.
Feinberg, Mark E.
description Objectives: We examine the impacts of adolescent arrest on friendship networks. In particular, we extend labeling theory by testing hypotheses for three potential mechanisms of interpersonal exclusion related to the stigma of arrest: rejection, withdrawal, and homophily. Method: We use longitudinal data on 48 peer networks from PROSPER, a study of rural youth followed through middle and high school. We test our hypotheses using stochastic actor–based models. Results: Our findings suggest that arrested youth are less likely to receive friendship ties from school peers and are also less likely to extend them. Moreover, these negative associations are attenuated by higher levels of risky behaviors among peers, suggesting that results are driven by exclusion from normative rather than nonnormative friendships. We find evidence of homophily on arrest but it appears to be driven by other selection mechanisms rather than a direct preference for similarity on arrest. Conclusions: Overall, our findings speak to how an arrest may foster social exclusion in rural schools, thereby limiting social capital for already disadvantaged youth.
doi_str_mv 10.1177/00224278211048942
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source Sociological Abstracts; SAGE Complete A-Z List
subjects Adolescents
Arrests
Disadvantaged
Friendship
Hypotheses
Juvenile justice
Labeling
Labeling (of Persons)
Peer relationships
Peers
Risk taking
Rural areas
Rural schools
Rural Youth
Secondary schools
Social capital
Social exclusion
Stigma
Stochastic models
Youth
title Arrested Friendships? Justice Involvement and Interpersonal Exclusion among Rural Youth
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