This article develops structural availability as a processual theory of youth entry into, embedding in, and exit from antisocial organization. Its central claim is that youth involvement in gangs and related antisocial formations is better understood not primarily as a movement from conformity to deviance, but as a shift in the relative structural availability of competing pathways. Antisocial organization becomes more likely where legitimate routes remain formally present but are weakly available in practice as buffered, recognized, and consequence-bearing forms of participation. The article builds on a four-level crime-process framework distinguishing criminogenic exposure, social mediation, gated realization, and temporal persistence. Within this architecture, structural availability refers to the relative degree to which a pathway is practically accessible, recognitionally legible, and sustainably bearable under prevailing conditions of buffering, load, and legitimate access. The framework distinguishes among: criminogenic exposure; social mediation; gated realization; temporal persistence; buffering; load concentration; legitimate pathway availability; recognition; antisocial organizational availability; organizational embedding; exit pressure. The article applies the framework through a theorem-guided qualitative secondary empirical design organized around four case families: recruitment and entry, membership and organizational life, exit and disengagement, and prevention and intervention. The analysis suggests that youth entry is often better understood as a shift in relative pathway availability than as deviance alone. Antisocial organizations may become practically available by offering role, belonging, protection, recognition, and consequence-bearing participation where legitimate institutions remain formally open but weakly viable in lived experience. The same organizational features that stabilize participation may also generate burden, conditionality, narrowing alternatives, and later exit pressure. Empirical support is strongest for entry, social mediation, organizational embedding, and exit pressure, and more differentiated for temporal persistence. The article therefore advances a bounded theory of youth antisocial organization rather than a universal theory of youth offending. The prevention implication is that interventions should be assessed not only by whether they address risk or behavior, but by whether they alter the relative availability of legitimate and antisocial pathways. This links the article to the broader concepts of prevention fit and prevention misalignment. This article forms part of the Theorem-Driven Crime Process Research Programme and represents its principal theoretical and secondary-empirical extension into youth crime and antisocial organization.
J. E. Fröderberg (Fri,) studied this question.
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