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Title: Is Parental Knowledge of their Adolescent Offspring's Whereabouts and Peer Associations Spuriously Associated with Offspring Delinquency?
Resulting in 1 citation.
1. Lahey, Benjamin B.
Van Hulle, Carol A.
D'Onofrio, Brian M.
Rodgers, Joseph Lee
Waldman, Irwin D.
Is Parental Knowledge of their Adolescent Offspring's Whereabouts and Peer Associations Spuriously Associated with Offspring Delinquency?
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology 36,6 (August 2008): 807-823. Online: January 24, 2008.
Also: http://www.springerlink.com/content/x636801136356128/?p=ace6e76807404b8d857fdf594a5c0a8f&pi=0
Cohort(s): Children of the NLSY79, NLSY79 Young Adult
Publisher: Springer
Keyword(s): Adolescent Behavior; Child Self-Administered Supplement (CSAS); Delinquency/Gang Activity; Neighborhood Effects; Parent Supervision/Monitoring; Parent-Child Interaction; Parental Influences; Peers/Peer influence/Peer relations; Variables, Independent - Covariate

Permission to reprint the abstract has not been received from the publisher.

Recent studies suggest that most of what parents know about their adolescent offspring's whereabouts and companions is the result of youth disclosure, rather than information gained through active parental monitoring. This raises the possibility that parental knowledge is spuriously correlated with youth delinquency solely because the most delinquent youth disclose the least information to parents (because they have the most to hide). We tested this spurious association hypothesis using prospective data on offspring of a nationally representative sample of US women, controlling demographic and contextual covariates. In separate analyses, greater parental knowledge of their offspring's peer associations at both 12–13 years and at 14–15 years was associated with lower odds of being in the top 1 standard deviation of youth-reported delinquency at 16–17 years, controlling for delinquency at the earlier ages. The extent to which parents set limits on activities with peers at 14–15 years did not mediate or moderate the association between parental knowledge and delinquency, but it did independently predict future delinquency among adolescents living in high-risk neighborhoods. This suggests that the association between parental knowledge and future delinquency is not solely spurious; rather parental knowledge and limit setting are both meaningful predictors of future delinquency.
Bibliography Citation
Lahey, Benjamin B., Carol A. Van Hulle, Brian M. D'Onofrio, Joseph Lee Rodgers and Irwin D. Waldman. "Is Parental Knowledge of their Adolescent Offspring's Whereabouts and Peer Associations Spuriously Associated with Offspring Delinquency?" Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology 36,6 (August 2008): 807-823. Online: January 24, 2008.