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Though seldom considered together, class and gender are among the most frequently analyzed correlates of delinquency today. This paper formulates and test a neo-Marxian, class-based, power control theory of gender and delinquency. Using this theory and a prediction made by Bonger more than a half-century ago, the article demonstrates that the relationship between gender and common forms of delinquency declines with each step down the class structure. Furthermore, where this relationship is strongest, it can be statistically removed by taking theoretically predicted variables into account. A power-control theory does much to specify and explain the class struture of gender and delinquency, and in doing so it demostrates the social bases of this relationship.
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John Hagan
Northwestern University
A. R. Gillis
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
John H. Simpson
Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning
American Journal of Sociology
University of Toronto
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Hagan et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a1d2a191c2cbcb15c5ddf44 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1086/228206