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Social Control and Youth Suicidality: Situating Durkheim's Ideas in a Multilevel Framework

机译:社会控制与青年自杀:将杜克海姆的思想放在一个多层次的框架中

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摘要

Although the suicide rate among U.S. youth between the ages of 10 to 24 dramatically increased during the past 50 years, little research has examined this outcome within larger social contexts of the adolescent environment. Relying on Durkheim's theory of social integration, we examine the effect of individual- and structural-level social integration on adolescents' suicidality. Using a sample of 6,369 respondents within 314 neighborhoods, we examine the assumptions that high levels of religious, familial, neighborhood, and school integration are associated with fewer suicide attempts among youths. We find support for the traditional Durkheimian assumptions; specifically, the proportion of religiously conservative residents in a neighborhood reduces youths' risk of attempting suicide, as do individual-level controls of school and parental attachment. Moreover, we find evidence for a cross-level interaction between depression and neighborhood level of religiosity. Depression increases youths' risk of attempting suicide, but in places where religion is very important, this positive effect of depression is diminished. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]
机译:尽管在过去的50年中,美国10至24岁的年轻人中的自杀率急剧上升,但很少有研究在青春期环境的较大社会背景下检验这一结果。依靠涂尔干的社会融合理论,我们研究了个人和结构层面的社会融合对青少年自杀倾向的影响。我们使用314个社区中的6,369名受访者作为样本,检验了以下假设:高水平的宗教,家庭,社区和学校融合与年轻人中较少的自杀未遂相关。我们发现支持传统的涂尔干主义假设。特别是,社区中宗教保守的居民比例降低了年轻人自杀的风险,个人对学校和父母的依恋控制也是如此。此外,我们发现抑郁与邻里宗教信仰之间存在跨层次互动。抑郁症增加了年轻人自杀的风险,但是在宗教非常重要的地方,抑郁症的这种积极作用就减弱了。 [出版物摘要]

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  • 来源
    《American Sociological Review》 |2008年第6期|p.921-943|共23页
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    David MaimonThe Ohio State UniversityDanielle C. KuhlBowling Green State UniversityDirect correspondence to David Maimón, Department of Sociology, The Ohio State University, 238 Townshend Hall, 1885 Neil Avenue Mall, Columbus, OH 43210 (maimon.l@osu.edu). We thank Christopher Browning for valuable method- ological advice along the way, and Peggy Giordano and Dana Haynie for helpful comments on revised drafts of the article. We also wish to thank the ASR editors and anonymous reviewers for comments and suggestions. An earlier version of this article was pre- sented at the American Society of Criminology meet- ings in Atlanta, GA, in November 2007. This research uses data from Add Health, a program project designed by J. Richard Udry, Peter S. Bearman, and Kathleen Mullan Harris, and funded by a grant PO 1 HD3 1 92 1 from the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, with cooperative funding from 17 other agencies. Special acknowledgment is due Ronald R. Rindfuss and Barbara Entwisle for assistance in the original design. Persons interested in obtaining files from Add Health should contact Add Health, Carolina Population Center, 123 W. Franklin St., Chapel Hill, NC 27516-2524 (addhealth@unc.edu).David Maimon is a PhD candidate in sociology at The Ohio State University. His research interests include sociological and criminological theories, quantitative research methodologies, and behavioral variation in deviance and crime across urban communities.Danielle C. Kuhl is an Assistant Professor of Sociology at Bowling Green State University. Her research interests include adolescent delinquency, "neighborhood effects," and social capital. She is currently working on a project that examines how changing neighborhood characteristics influence violence in the transition from adolescence to young adulthood. Her prior work onpeer networks, juvenile delinquency, and youth violence has been published in Criminology (with Dana Haynie) and the Journal of Quantitative Criminology (with Benjamin Cornwell).;

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  • 入库时间 2022-08-17 23:18:43

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