RT Article T1 Deciding to commit crime in adolescence: do moral beliefs matter? JF Journal of crime and justice VO 47 IS 2 SP 155 OP 170 A1 Timmer, Anastasiia A2 Antonaccio, Olena A2 Botchkovar, Ekaterina A2 Hughes, Lorine A. 1974- LA English YR 2024 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/188303759X AB Recent research has underscored the importance of thoughtful and reflective decision-making (TRDM) abilities of youth in preventing and reducing crime and delinquency. Yet, little attention has been paid to the conditions under which TRDM is more or less likely to have these preventative effects. We draw on data recently collected from adolescents attending schools in three metropolitan US areas (2014–2017) to better understand the role of decision-making in youth crime. This is the first study to assess how TRDM interacts with important developmental factors such as moral beliefs to shape projected crime and delinquency, including violence, property crime, and cyberdeviance. Negative binomial regression models reveal that the crime protective influence of the ability to make thoughtful and reflective decisions is most pronounced among adolescents with stronger moral beliefs. In fact, stronger moral beliefs increase the influence of TRDM on various types of crime and delinquency. We provide suggestions for crime prevention policies and programs focused on fostering deliberative thinking and strengthening the distinction between ‘right’ and ‘wrong’ among adolescents. K1 Morality K1 TRDM K1 Decision-making K1 Delinquency DO 10.1080/0735648X.2023.2241442