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Examining college students’ differential deviance: A partial test of social structure-social learning theory
Authors:Danielle Tolson Cooper  Jennifer L Klein
Institution:1. Henry C. Lee College of Criminal Justice and Forensic Sciences, University of New Haven, West Haven, Connecticut, USA;2. Department for Social Sciences, University of Texas at Tyler, Tyler, Texas, USA
Abstract:College students are engaged in a variety of activities on campus, some of which are deviant and may be criminal. This research investigated 12 activities prohibited on many college campuses (for example, smoking, meeting in an unreserved room, and removing school property without permission). Negative binomial regressions were used to analyze a count of engagement in the deviant activities and logistic regressions were used to separately analyze the three most common behaviors found in the sample—non-permitted parking, alcohol consumption, and making a false excuse. The findings show moderate support for the general (using the count variable) and the specific (using the three dichotomized variables) predictability of unofficial and official sanctions as a proxy measures of Sherman’s defiance theory and the four constructs of Akers’ social learning theory. The inconsistencies among which variables were significant and which had the strongest effect are discussed, along with a mediation analysis.
Keywords:College students  social learning  social structure-social learning  deviance  crime  student conduct violations
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