| Literature DB >> 12033557 |
Michelle Campbell Augustine1, Pamela Wilcox, Graham C Ousey, Richard R Clayton.
Abstract
While school-based adolescent victimization has received a great deal of public attention, there exist relatively few theoretically driven studies aimed at explaining this phenomenon. We address this paucity by providing a test of a criminal-opportunity model of school-based victimization using data on over 3,000 students from 40 different Kentucky middle and high schools. The effects of opportunity-related concepts are estimated for both violent and property victimization, and comparisons are made for each victimization type across middle- and high-school student subsamples. Findings suggest that criminal opportunity theory is relevant to the understanding of school-based victimization. In particular, indicators of exposure to crime and target antagonism appear to be robust predictors. Further, there appears to be substantial generalizability in the effects of opportunity-related variables across violent versus property victimization as well as across middle-school versus high-school contexts.Mesh:
Year: 2002 PMID: 12033557 DOI: 10.1891/vivi.17.2.233.33643
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Violence Vict ISSN: 0886-6708