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Self‐Esteem,the Fear of Crime,and the Decision to Protect Oneself From Victimization
Authors:Emily K. Asencio  Monica Merrill  Michael Steiner
Affiliation:1. Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice, Sonoma State University, , Rohnert Park, California, 94928;2. Department of Sociology, University of Akron, , Akron, Ohio, 44325
Abstract:This research extends prior work that examines self‐esteem as an outcome of protective behaviors against crime victimization by focusing instead on the moderating influence of self‐esteem on the relationship between the fear of crime and the decision to protect oneself from victimization. The fear of crime is conceptualized as two separate components (fear of victimization and perceived risk) in accordance with prior work. Self‐esteem is conceptualized as three separate components (worth, efficacy, and authenticity), and measured with a recently designed instrument for capturing each aspect of self‐esteem separately. Data are collected through surveys of a population at high risk for victimization (undergraduate college students). Logistic regression analyses demonstrate that self‐esteem does play a role for deciding whether to engage in protective behaviors, and that the specific components of self‐esteem moderate defensive behavioral outcomes differently. Specifically, the self‐worth, self‐efficacy, and authenticity components of self‐esteem influence the decision to carry protection, but not the decision to take a self‐defense class. Implications for both the fear of crime and self‐esteem literatures are addressed.
Keywords:fear of crime  perceived risk  protective behavior  self‐defense  self‐esteem  victimization
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