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European Journal of Criminology
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The Association between Social Capital and Juvenile Crime

The Role of Individual and Structural Factors

Venla Salmi

National Research Institute of Legal Policy, Helsinki, Finland, venla.salmi{at}om.fi

Janne Kivivuori

National Research Institute of Legal Policy, Helsinki, Finland, janne.kivivuori{at}om.fi

Social capital has emerged as a widely used concept both in empirical studies and in theoretical debate in social science. In the field of criminology, several studies have found support for the association between various forms of social capital and criminal behaviour. This study examines the association between social capital and self-reported delinquency when structural and individual-level factors are controlled. Indicators of social capital, family structure, economic situation, self-control, cognitive ability and participation in delinquent behaviour are explored in a nationally representative sample of 15-16-year-old Finnish adolescents (N = 5142). The results of the multivariate analysis indicate that (as indicators of social capital) low parental support, low teacher control and low interpersonal trust are associated with delinquent behaviour when structural and individual-level variables, including self-control, are controlled. Parental control, teacher support and intergenerational closure are associated with delinquency only in bivariate models. It seems that parents’ weak ties connecting the adolescent to the part-time labour market do not protect him or her from the risk of delinquency. Compared with social capital and structural indicators, the level of self-control seems to have a stronger association with the risk of delinquent behaviour. Cognitive ability also emerges as a robust correlate of delinquency. The article concludes by discussing the need to take individual-level propensities into account when examining the effects of social capital.

Key Words: Adolescence • Delinquency • Self-Control • Social Capital

European Journal of Criminology, Vol. 3, No. 2, 123-148 (2006)
DOI: 10.1177/1477370806061967


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V. Salmi, M. Smolej, and J. Kivivuori
Crime victimization, exposure to crime news and social trust among adolescents
Young, August 1, 2007; 15(3): 255 - 272.
[Abstract] [PDF]