RT Article
T1 A Reconceptualization of Social Bond Theory to Predict Change Sequences in Offending
JF Crime & delinquency
VO 70
IS 1
SP 64
OP 86
A1 Mears, Daniel P. 1966-
A2 Stafford, Mark C.
LA English
YR 2024
UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/188252392X
AB We argue that reconceptualizing social bond theory (SBT) through incorporation of dual agency and change can identify unique causal change sequences, improve its ability to explain offending, and generate new questions about it. The reconceptualization recognizes that individuals and those with whom they interact play an ongoing role in contributing to the bond. It shows that changes in the bond can contribute to changes in delinquency through three sequences, each with a unique over-time pattern that depends on how bond agents respond to delinquency. We identify implications for SBT?highlighting that theoretical arguments about static effects do not necessarily equate to straightforward predictions about change effects?and, more broadly, efforts to advance theories of offending.
K1 Agency
K1 Change
K1 Offending
K1 reconceptualization
K1 social bond theory
DO 10.1177/00111287221088000