Friendships and Violent Behavior During Adolescence

This study investigated the extent to which interpersonal processes within male friendships are associated with violent behavior patterns during adolescence. At ages 13‐14, 15‐16, and 17‐18, we observed the participants (206 boys) in our laboratory discussing problem solving situations with a close...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inSocial development (Oxford, England) Vol. 6; no. 2; pp. 207 - 223
Main Authors Dishion, Thomas J., Eddy, J. Mark, Haas, Eric, Li, Fuzhong, Spracklen, Kathleen
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford, UK Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.07.1997
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Summary:This study investigated the extent to which interpersonal processes within male friendships are associated with violent behavior patterns during adolescence. At ages 13‐14, 15‐16, and 17‐18, we observed the participants (206 boys) in our laboratory discussing problem solving situations with a close friend. Although the boys typically brought in different friends for each of the three assessments, we found considerable continuity in the boys' behaviors, most notably in the topics discussed. In particular, the tendency of a dyad to engage in deviant and violent talk was uniquely associated with violence in adolescence, controlling for childhood antisocial behavior and coercive discipline practices in the home. These findings suggest that adolescent violence is embedded within enduring social interactional patterns of friendships, where the faces change but the process remains the same.
Bibliography:istex:0A0F8F2D6170EE2E3165991FD01114A17045C1D0
ArticleID:SODE207
ark:/67375/WNG-1BZ6LBBD-2
This project was supported by grant DA 07031 from the National Institute on Drug Abuse at the National Institutes of Health to the senior author, by grant MH 37940 from the National Institute of Mental Health to John R. Reid, Ph.D., and by grant MH 46690 from the National Institute of Mental Health to Gerald R. Patterson, Ph.D.
ISSN:0961-205X
1467-9507
DOI:10.1111/j.1467-9507.1997.tb00102.x