Self-Control, Risky Lifestyles, and Victimization among Chinese Adolescents

Int J Offender Ther Comp Criminol. 2022 Dec;66(16):1837-1861. doi: 10.1177/0306624X211027487. Epub 2021 Jun 26.

Abstract

Violent and property victimization among Chinese adolescents remains a social problem, yet studies that incorporate individual characteristics and situational/contextual factors to explain such victimization remain scarce. Drawing upon survey data collected from a large, representative sample of middle school students from two areas in Guizhou Province, China, we test Schreck's integrated model of victimization, finding that self-control has both direct and indirect influences on violent and property victimization among Chinese adolescents. Delinquent peers play the most significant intermediate role in connecting self-control and adolescent victimization. Results reconfirm the importance of both self-control and risky lifestyles/situations in shaping victimization, and identify a victimization pathway that accentuates the key linking mechanism of delinquent peers in the self-control-victimization nexus.

Keywords: China; delinquency; delinquent peers; self-control; unsupervised activities; victimization.

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Bullying*
  • Crime Victims*
  • Humans
  • Juvenile Delinquency*
  • Life Style
  • Self-Control*