Fostering a culture of lawfulness: Examining the relationship between perceptions of law enforcement legitimacy, legal reasoning, and *behavior.

Item

Title
Fostering a culture of lawfulness: Examining the relationship between perceptions of law enforcement legitimacy, legal reasoning, and *behavior.
Identifier
AAI3115254
identifier
3115254
Creator
Grant, Heath.
Contributor
Adviser: Dennis Kenney
Date
2004
Language
English
Publisher
City University of New York.
Subject
Sociology, Criminology and Penology | Psychology, Cognitive
Abstract
The problems of crime and corruption worldwide have been studies from many different angles and methodologies. This study provides an integrative perspective on the legal socialization of youth conceptualizing legal reasoning (how youth reason about the importance of rules and laws) as a resiliency variable that can mediate the negative influences of selected risk factors drawn from the criminological literature (i.e. negative peer influences, external locus of control, low self-esteem, and perceptions of unsafety in the neighborhood) on self-reported delinquency. The study also examines the effects of legal culture on socialization through youth perceptions of the legitimacy of law enforcement. The casual structure across all of these variables is tested through the use of structural equation modeling. The study sample of over 10,000 Mexican youths participating in a state-wide program designed to positively influence perceptions related to rules and laws in unprecedented in the legal socialization literature.
Type
dissertation
Source
PQT Legacy CUNY.xlsx
degree
Ph.D.
Item sets
CUNY Legacy ETDs