36 results on '"Ryan D. Schroeder"'
Search Results
2. The Prescription Drug Problem: A New American Crisis?
- Author
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Ryan D. Schroeder, Jason A. Ford, George E. Higgins
- Published
- 2019
3. Eglon’s Fat and Ehud’s Oracle: A Reconsideration of Humour in Judges 3.12–30
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Ryan D. Schroeder
- Subjects
Religious studies - Abstract
Judg. 3.12–30 details the assassination of King Eglon of Moab by the Benjaminite Ehud ben Gera. Many scholars insist that the story was originally meant to be funny, contending that the text casts Eglon (i.e. ‘Little Calf’) humorously as a slaughtered bovine. Indeed, some regard the text as ‘satire’, though there remains no consensus as to what, exactly, constitutes the butt of the joke. In this article, I argue that Eglon’s fat and Ehud’s feigned oracle work together to form a comical critique of foreign rulers and their reliance on divination. The argument draws on Victor Raskin’s semantic theory of verbal humour along with a re-examination of fat on elite male bodies in the Hebrew Bible and the practice of ancient oracle giving, as reflected in cuneiform sources. I thus aim to elucidate ways the text would have registered as humorous and meaningful for an ancient West Asian audience.
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- 2022
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4. IStillSuck at Everything: The Generality of Failure and Future Arrest
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Ryan D. Schroeder, Thomas J. Mowen, and Samantha Kopf
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Sexually transmitted disease ,Clinical Psychology ,Generality ,Sociology and Political Science ,Social Psychology ,050901 criminology ,05 social sciences ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,0509 other social sciences ,Psychology ,Law ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Developmental psychology - Abstract
The generality of failure theory links arrest – a “failure” at crime – to other failures later on in life such as getting a sexually transmitted disease or losing a job. Yet, this theoretical orien...
- Published
- 2020
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5. Let Us Go to the Seer! : Prophecy, Scribal Culture, and the Invention of Hebrew Scripture
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Ryan D. Schroeder and Ryan D. Schroeder
- Abstract
Prophecy in the Hebrew Bible (“Old Testament”) has long been regarded as fundamentally different from the divinatory methods of ancient pagans: while the pagans sought out and solicited messages from the gods, the Hebrew prophets received revelation spontaneously, at the initiative of Israel's deity. The trouble with this dichotomy between solicited and spontaneous revelation is that it overlooks or misreads a number of ancient sources, and it obscures the similarities between Hebrew and other societies of the ancient Middle East. In this book, Ryan D. Schroeder re-examines the evidence for prophecy both in the Hebrew Bible and in documents excavated in Israel/Palestine, Syria, Jordan, and Iraq since the late nineteenth century. He shows that prophecies were regularly solicited across ancient West Asia. Moreover, the spontaneity of Israelite revelation is largely a mirage produced by ancient Hebrew scribes and reinforced by modern scholars intent on establishing the uniqueness and superiority of “biblical” religion.
- Published
- 2025
6. Strain and Prescription Drug Misuse in the United States Military
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Ryan D. Schroeder, Thomas J. Mowen, and Taylor Tolles
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Clinical Psychology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Sociology and Political Science ,Social Psychology ,Prescription Drug Misuse ,business.industry ,Strain (biology) ,Medicine ,business ,Psychiatry ,Law - Abstract
Recent studies have shown that prescription drug misuse occurs with striking regularity among members of the United States military. Yet, few prior studies have sought to examine the underlying mec...
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- 2019
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7. 'Sticks and Stones May Break My Bones, but Words Will Never Hurt Me': Verbal Sexual Harassment Among Middle School Students
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Ryan D. Schroeder and Shawn M. Rolfe
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Male ,Injury control ,Accident prevention ,education ,Poison control ,050109 social psychology ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Suicide prevention ,Occupational safety and health ,Developmental psychology ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Injury prevention ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Students ,Crime Victims ,Applied Psychology ,Schools ,05 social sciences ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Emotional Abuse ,Clinical Psychology ,Physical Abuse ,Sexual Harassment ,050903 gender studies ,Harassment ,Female ,New York City ,0509 other social sciences ,Psychology ,Social psychology - Abstract
Research has recently found that sexual harassment occurs throughout our education system. Although the focus of these studies has been on both verbal and physical sexual harassment, the literature is scant when examining just verbal sexual harassment. Using self-report data from 30 New York City middle schools, the current study adds to the literature by examining the prevalence of verbal sexual harassment victimization and perpetration through the lens of gender and dating experiences. The study highlights that boys are verbally sexually harassed more than girls and students with dating experience are more likely to be victims or perpetrators of verbal sexual harassment. Additional findings, limitations, and policy implications are discussed.
- Published
- 2017
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8. Religiosity and Crime Revisited: Accounting for Non-Believers
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Ryan D. Schroeder, Erinn J. Broadus, and Christopher Bradley
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050402 sociology ,Sociology and Political Science ,Social Psychology ,Conceptualization ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,050109 social psychology ,Empathy ,Religious belief ,Criminology ,Social control theory ,Religious identity ,Religiosity ,Clinical Psychology ,0504 sociology ,Negative relationship ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychology ,Social identity theory ,Law ,Social psychology ,media_common - Abstract
Research generally shows a negative relationship between religiosity and specific forms of offending. In the current study, we advance an alternative conceptualization of the relationship between religiosity and offending that accounts for the unique nature of religious non-belief. Drawing from social identity theory, we contend that criminological theorizing of the relationship should move beyond social control theory postulations and account for the unique experiences of non-believers. Using data from the College Religious Belief and Empathy Survey, findings reveal that atheists and agnostics offend at a rate similar to committed religious believers. Implications for the religiosity and crime relationship are discussed.
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- 2017
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9. Maternal Parenting Style and Delinquency by Race and the Moderating Effect of Structural Disadvantage
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Thomas J. Mowen and Ryan D. Schroeder
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Sociology and Political Science ,Ethnic group ,General Social Sciences ,Poison control ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Disadvantaged ,Developmental psychology ,Injury prevention ,Parenting styles ,Juvenile delinquency ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Disadvantage - Abstract
Contemporary research suggests authoritative parenting is the most effective parenting style in deterring juvenile delinquency. Some research has found there are differences in parenting style between racial groups due to structural disadvantage faced by marginalized individuals. Yet, relatively little is known about how racial differences in parenting and the moderating effect of disadvantage relate to juvenile delinquency. The current project explores parenting style differences among Black, Hispanic, and White mothers and the moderating impact of disadvantage on delinquency. Results indicate authoritarian parenting is least effective in deterring delinquency among all racial groups; however, neighborhood disadvantage provides a negative moderating effect between authoritarian parenting and delinquency for Black youth only, whereas uninvolved parenting was related to delinquency for White youth only.
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- 2015
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10. Health-Related Stigmas
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Maggie B. Stone and Ryan D. Schroeder
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- 2017
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11. Weight Strain and Binge Drinking among Adolescents
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Ryan D. Schroeder, Hilary M. Dotson, and Jason A. Ford
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Sociology and Political Science ,Social Psychology ,business.industry ,General strain theory ,Stigma (botany) ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Poison control ,Binge drinking ,Suicide prevention ,Occupational safety and health ,Clinical Psychology ,Environmental health ,Injury prevention ,Medicine ,business ,Law ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Obesity and substance use are two common areas of research among adolescents. Interestingly, very little research examines the relationship between these two important health risk behaviors and the findings are inconsistent. Guided by Agnew’s general strain theory and using the Add Health data, we examine this neglected area of research. The current research has identified a link between weight strain and binge drinking and is supportive of the extant research on both general strain theory and the links between stigma, stress, and health. We also found some evidence that this relationship was gendered. Implications and future research directions are discussed.
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- 2014
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12. 'You Can't Eat WHAT?' Managing the Stigma of Celiac Disease
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Ryan D. Schroeder and Thomas J. Mowen
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Sociology and Political Science ,Social Psychology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Stigma (botany) ,Disease ,Developmental psychology ,Clinical Psychology ,Interpersonal relationship ,Perception ,Narrative ,Life history ,Psychology ,Law ,Clinical psychology ,media_common - Abstract
Drawing on modified labeling theory and the concept of symbolic entrapment, the goal of the current research is to examine the perceptions and management of stigma associated with Celiac Disease (CD). Through an assessment of life history narratives from a sample of adults with the disease, we find that the younger subjects who were most recently diagnosed with CD reported the most significant problems with disease-related stigma, social activities, and interpersonal relationships. Furthermore, we find that the subjects utilize a variety of stigma-management strategies to protect their pre-disease identities.
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- 2014
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13. You Are What You Eat: The Impact of Nutrition on Alcohol and Drug Use
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Ryan D. Schroeder and George E. Higgins
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0301 basic medicine ,Drug ,Gerontology ,Adult ,Male ,Health (social science) ,National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey ,Alcohol Drinking ,Substance-Related Disorders ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Nutritional Status ,Marijuana Smoking ,Odds ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Sex Factors ,Medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Micronutrients ,media_common ,030109 nutrition & dietetics ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Alcohol and drug ,Middle Aged ,Micronutrient ,Nutrition Surveys ,Biosocial theory ,Diet ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Female ,Substance use ,business ,Energy Intake ,Deviance (sociology) - Abstract
Background: Experimental research has shown that nutrition influences behavioral deviance. Objectives: The current project addresses the impact of nutrition on problem alcohol and drug use in a nationally representative sample of US adults. Methods: The study relies on the daily dietary nutrition data and the substance use measures in the 2007–2008 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey. Results: The findings generally show that macronutrients increase the odds of substance use and micronutrients decrease the odds of substance use, especially among females. In addition, nutrient imbalance is a particularly strong predictor of substance use for both males and females. Depression partially accounts for the relationship between dietary nutrition consumption and substance use. Conclusions: Nutrition represents a promising extension of the biosocial perspective in substance use disorders.
- Published
- 2016
14. [Retracted] Nehemiah 2:13–16 (Inv. MOTB.SCR.003175)
- Author
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Ryan Blackwelder, Joseph Kyle Stewart, Martin G. Abegg, Ryan D. Schroeder, and Joshua M. Matson
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History ,Biblical studies ,Jewish studies ,Dead Sea Scrolls ,Ancient history ,Hebrew Bible - Published
- 2016
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15. Homeless Shelters' Policies on Sex Offenders: Is This Another Collateral Consequence?
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Shawn M. Rolfe, Ryan D. Schroeder, and Richard Tewksbury
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Collateral ,Poison control ,Criminology ,Computer security ,computer.software_genre ,Suicide prevention ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Social support ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Applied Psychology ,0505 law ,Sex offender ,05 social sciences ,Sex Offenses ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Criminals ,Organizational Policy ,Scholarship ,Ill-Housed Persons ,050501 criminology ,Housing ,Residence ,Psychology ,computer ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
The primary focus of sex offender research has been on the efficacy and collateral consequences of sex offender registration and notification (SORN) and residence restrictions. Past scholarship has found these laws to cause numerous re-entry barriers for sex offenders. Such barriers have affected sex offenders’ ability to find and maintain housing, employment, and social support. Moreover, registered sex offenders (RSOs) have become homeless due to such laws. Although previous scholarship has highlighted the collateral consequences of SORN, there is a lack of scholarship addressing homeless sex offenders. Specifically, the current study assesses policies regarding RSO access to homeless shelters in a four-state region, focusing on the effect of structural, procedural, and geographic factors, as well as a shelter’s proximity to children. Drawing on the loose coupling organizational framework, the findings suggest that a small maximum occupancy, unwritten policies for RSOs, being in Kentucky or Tennessee, being located near a school, and being near a higher proportion of homes with children all decrease the odds that a homeless shelter allows RSOs. Furthermore, although unwilling to make exceptions to the policies regarding RSOs, shelters were generally willing to make exceptions to other policies governing shelter accessibility.
- Published
- 2016
16. Parenting Style Transitions and Delinquency
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Thomas J. Mowen and Ryan D. Schroeder
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Maternal attachment ,Sociology and Political Science ,Behavior change ,General Social Sciences ,Developmental psychology ,Style (sociolinguistics) ,Parenting styles ,Juvenile delinquency ,Life course approach ,sense organs ,National Longitudinal Surveys ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,Psychology ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Social influence ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Parenting style has been extensively analyzed as a contributor to juvenile delinquency in the criminological literature, but no research to date has assessed the prevalence of parenting style changes during adolescence or the influence of such parenting style changes on juvenile delinquency. Drawing from the life course theory, the results show that parenting style transitions are common across the first and third waves of the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth, 1997. Furthermore, specific parenting style shifts are associated with changes in juvenile delinquency, most notably the shifts characterized by a decrease in responsiveness or an increase or decrease in demandingness. Last, changes in maternal attachment associated with parenting style changes partially mediate the effect of such transitions on delinquent outcomes.
- Published
- 2012
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17. Maternal Attachment Trajectories and Criminal Offending By Race
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Thomas J. Mowen, George E. Higgins, and Ryan D. Schroeder
- Subjects
Maternal attachment ,Race (biology) ,Cohort ,Closeness ,Juvenile delinquency ,National Longitudinal Surveys ,Young adult ,Psychology ,Law ,Developmental psychology - Abstract
Parental attachment is a key predictor of juvenile offending. Most prior research on the topic, however, assumes that parental attachment is stable throughout youth and adolescence. On the contrary, recent research has established that parenting is a dynamic factor for many youth during adolescence. In the current study, we assess the relationship between trajectories of maternal attachment and offending during adolescence and young adulthood. Following a cohort of 859 youth from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth data aged 10 or 11 over a period of 6 years, we find four distinctive trajectories of maternal attachment and two distinctive trajectories of offending. The results suggest that changes that occur in maternal closeness are linked to changes in offending across adolescence. However, when young adult offending is assessed when the youth are 18 or 19 years of age, we find that adolescent maternal attachment trajectories are not significant predictors of offending.
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- 2012
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18. Convict Criminologists in the Classroom
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Michael Lenza, John F. Frana, and Ryan D. Schroeder
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Convict ,Sociology ,Criminology - Published
- 2012
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19. Social Constraints and Civil War: Bridging the Gap with Criminological Theory
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Clayton L. Thyne and Ryan D. Schroeder
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Spanish Civil War ,Sociology and Political Science ,Taste (sociology) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Political science ,Unemployment ,Civil Conflict ,Ideology ,Criminology ,Social control theory ,Conformity ,Internal conflict ,media_common - Abstract
Scholars’ views on civil warfare have changed dramatically. Understanding that conventional and ideological civil wars are rare, scholars are increasingly coming to view rebellions as large-scale criminality. However, much work remains to link criminality and civil conflict. The authors draw on a large body of criminological research known as social control theory, which identifies informal factors that are expected to produce conformity with norms and laws, such as social attachments, commitment to achieve goals, involvement in the community, and belief that law is just. While a plethora of work has linked these processes to criminological behavior, the authors build a bridge to the civil war literature. Empirical tests examine how marriage, unemployment and military involvement impact the one’s “taste for revolt” at the individual-level, and the likelihood of civil war onset at the macrolevel. The results present a robust empirical link between social control theory and internal conflict.
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- 2012
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20. Prescription Drug Misuse
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Jason A. Ford and Ryan D. Schroeder
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Drug ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Health (social science) ,Prescription Drug Misuse ,business.industry ,Drug misuse ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Poison control ,Heroin ,Test (assessment) ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Injury prevention ,medicine ,Psychiatry ,business ,medicine.drug ,media_common - Abstract
Shifting drug use patterns away from traditional illicit drugs (i.e., heroin, cocaine, methamphetamines) and toward prescription drug misuse among adolescents necessitates a renewed theoretical emphasis in adolescent drug use research. Given the unique processes and perspectives associated with prescription drug misuse, theoretical connections to prescription drug misuse likely show different patterns than prior research has shown with marijuana and other illicit drugs. Using data from the 2009 National Survey on Drug Use and Health, the authors apply concepts of social control theory, social learning theory, and strain theory to prescription drug misuse and draw comparisons with the predictors of marijuana and other drug use. Findings indicate that social learning, social control, and strain measures exert unique and independent influences on all three categories of adolescent substance use. Despite the similar theoretical effects across categories of substance use, many notable differences in theoretical processes are evident, especially for prescription drug misuse.
- Published
- 2012
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21. Physical health and crime among low-income urban women: An application of general strain theory
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Terrence D. Hill, Stacey Hoskins Haynes, Ryan D. Schroeder, and Christopher Bradley
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Low income ,Sociology and Political Science ,Social Psychology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,General strain theory ,Physical health ,Disadvantaged ,Odds ,medicine ,Anxiety ,Sociology ,medicine.symptom ,Law ,Welfare ,Social psychology ,Applied Psychology ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,media_common ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Purpose Although studies of General Strain Theory (GST) typically include measures of physical health in multi-item indices of strain, no work has investigated the independent influence of physical health on criminal offending. The current research explores the relationship between physical health and criminal offending among low-income women living in disadvantaged neighborhoods. Methods Using data from the Welfare, Children, and Families (WCF) project, criminal behavior is predicted over two years with measures of physical health, depression, anxiety, competing strain, and relevant background factors. Results Poorer physical health at baseline and declines in physical health increase the odds of offending onset among previous non-offenders and reduce the odds of decreased offending among previous offenders. In offending onset models, higher levels of anxiety and depression at baseline and increases in these symptoms partially mediate the effect of poorer baseline health and fully mediate the effect of the loss of physical health. In decreased offending models, increases in anxiety and depression fully mediate the effect of poorer baseline health and partially mediate the effect of the loss of physical health. Conclusions The data suggest that poor health and declines in physical health influence both offending onset and offending escalation directly and indirectly through increases in anxiety and depression.
- Published
- 2011
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22. Book Review: Wounded I Am More Awake: Finding Meaning after Terror
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Muhamed Fazlagic and Ryan D. Schroeder
- Subjects
Race (biology) ,Psychoanalysis ,Sociology and Political Science ,Meaning (existential) ,Psychology ,Education - Published
- 2014
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23. HIGHER EDUCATION AND CRIMINAL OFFENDING OVER THE LIFE COURSE
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Jason A. Ford and Ryan D. Schroeder
- Subjects
Sociology and Political Science ,Higher education ,business.industry ,Spite ,Juvenile delinquency ,Attendance ,Life course approach ,Contemporary society ,Criminology ,Investment (macroeconomics) ,Psychology ,business ,Educational attainment - Abstract
Educational attainment and school bonding are established predictors of delinquent behavior. In spite of an abundance of research on the relationship between education and delinquency, there is little research that examines the impact of education on stability and change in criminal offending over the life course. This dearth of research is surprising given the increasing significance of post-secondary education in contemporary society and the prominence of the life course approach in the study of crime. The current study uses seven waves of data from the National Youth Survey to examine the impact of higher education on criminal offending over the life course. Findings indicate that college attendance and investment in higher education are negatively associated with criminal offending in adulthood. In addition, the protective effect of higher education is stronger for individuals who were more delinquent during adolescence. Study limitations and future research needs are discussed.
- Published
- 2010
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24. Family Transitions and Juvenile Delinquency*
- Author
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Michael J. Oghia, Ryan D. Schroeder, and Aurea K. Osgood
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Cohabitation ,Sociology and Political Science ,Family structure ,Injury prevention ,Juvenile delinquency ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Poison control ,sense organs ,Sociology ,Suicide prevention ,Social psychology ,Occupational safety and health ,Developmental psychology - Abstract
There is a large body of research that shows children from non-intact homes show higher rates of juvenile delinquency than children from intact homes, partially due to weaker parental control and supervision in non-intact homes. What has not been adequately addressed in the research is the influence of changes in family structure among individual adolescents over time on delinquent offending. Using the first and third waves of the National Youth Study, we assess the effect of family structure changes on changes in delinquent offending between waves through the intermediate process of changes in family time and parental attachment. Although prior research has documented adolescents in broken homes are more delinquent than youth in intact homes, the process of family dissolution is not associated with concurrent increases in offending. In contrast, family formation through marriage or cohabitation is associated with simultaneous increases in offending. Changes in family time and parental attachment account for a portion of the family formation effect on delinquency, and prior parental attachment and juvenile offending significantly condition the effect of family formation on offending.
- Published
- 2010
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25. Adult child-parent bonds and life course criminality
- Author
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Ryan D. Schroeder, Peggy C. Giordano, and Stephen A. Cernkovich
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Sociology and Political Science ,Social Psychology ,Bond ,Criminal behavior ,Job market ,Developmental psychology ,Adult life ,Romantic partners ,Life course approach ,Early childhood ,Psychology ,Law ,Social psychology ,Applied Psychology ,Social capital - Abstract
Parents and parenting practices are often implicated as predictors of early childhood offending in criminological research, but little is known about the role of parents in adulthood in promoting or inhibiting criminal behavior. As juveniles mature into adult roles, parents also continue to mature and interact with their children in numerous roles throughout the life course. Unlike peers and romantic partners, parents are not easily discarded. Adults who have built a good foundation with their parents, then, possess additional social capital that has the potential to better adult life course outcomes, including criminal behavior. Social bonds formed within romantic relationships and stable employment have been the dominant factors identified within criminological literature in promoting criminal desistance, but in today's society with high rates of divorce and an unstable low-skilled job market, parents of origin may be an important stabilizing force in the lives of adults, particularly those lacking other conventional bonds. Using three waves of data from the Ohio Lifecourse Study, a project that spans some twenty-one years, the findings showed that strong relationships with parents are a significant predictor of criminal desistance for adult children, mainly through the emotional benefits these relationships have for the adult children. Furthermore, the data revealed that the adult child-parent relationship is a stronger predictor of desistance among the subjects with poor romantic relationship bonds. Implications for the life course theory are discussed.
- Published
- 2010
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26. Parenting and Adult Criminality: An Examination of Direct and Indirect Effects by Race
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Peggy C. Giordano, Ryan D. Schroeder, Ronald E. Bulanda, and Stephen A. Cernkovich
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Sociology and Political Science ,Child rearing ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Self-concept ,Poison control ,Anger ,Developmental psychology ,Interpersonal relationship ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Juvenile delinquency ,Parenting styles ,Life course approach ,Psychology ,media_common ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Parenting practices are among the strongest predictors of juvenile delinquency identified in the criminological literature and have been intimately connected to adult offending.The prior research connecting early parenting experiences with crime, however, has not systematically assessed the long-term effect of parenting style on adult criminal offending, or the processes linking the parenting and crime, by race. In this study, we explore the extent to which experiences associated with minority status influence the nature of the relationship between parenting style and adult criminal offending as well as the mediating processes of adult social bonds and emotional self-concepts involved. Using two waves of a contemporary longitudinal sample of youth, the results show that parenting styles lacking in demandingness show significant and positive effects on adult criminal offending among the Black sample, but parenting styles exert little long-term effects on criminal offending among the White sample. Furthermore, negative emotionality, namely anger, significantly mediates the relationship between uninvolved parenting and adult criminality among the Black and White samples, but depression is also a mediator for the Whites. In this sample, adult social bonds do not mediate the relationship between parenting during childhood and adult criminality.
- Published
- 2009
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27. SPIRITUALITY AND RELIGION, EMOTIONAL COPING, AND CRIMINAL DESISTANCE: A QUALITATIVE STUDY OF MEN UNDERGOING CHANGE
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Ryan D. Schroeder and John F. Frana
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Coping (psychology) ,Sociology and Political Science ,Distraction ,Stressor ,Spirituality ,Narrative ,Qualitative property ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Qualitative research - Abstract
Retrospective narratives of change consistently emphasize the importance of religious devotion and spirituality in initiating sustained behavioral change, but little is known about the process by which religion and spirituality promote desistance from crime. The current project is designed to add to the knowledge of the relationship between religion/spirituality and behavioral change by systematically investigating the ways that men residing in a halfway house define the role of religion/spirituality as an emotion-coping mechanism in their desistance efforts. The qualitative data reveal that religion/spirituality is primarily used by these men currently undergoing behavioral change as a form of emotional comfort, a distraction from current stressors, and as factor demarcating the transition from deviance to a more conventional life. Suggestions for religious programming designed to stimulate behavioral changes are discussed.
- Published
- 2009
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28. BECAUSE IT'S FREE POKER! A QUALITATIVE ANALYSIS OF FREE TEXAS HOLD'EM POKER TOURNAMENTS
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Ryan D. Schroeder and Christopher Bradley
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Social dynamics ,Sociology and Political Science ,Covert ,Cash ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Advertising ,Profit motive ,Participant observation ,Social class ,Psychology ,Popularity ,Texas hold 'em ,media_common - Abstract
The game of poker has dramatically increased in popularity in America over the past decade, and includes a new trend in poker in which tournaments are played with no monetary wagering. These “free” poker tournaments are the primary focus of this project. Our interest in these free poker tournaments was twofold: first, we wished to identify what would motivate a person to play poker when there is no profit motive; second, we wanted to learn how the social dynamics of the game itself may or may not change when monetary risk is not present. Through covert participant observation of free poker tournaments at four different locations we were able to discover three main motivations among the players: sharpening skills for later cash games, sociability, and gaining the status of a “regular player.” We also discovered that the tenor and tempo of the game tended to vary not as a function of the location, but rather because of the social class of the players. We offer several hypotheses to guide future research end...
- Published
- 2009
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29. Academic Strain and Non-Medical Use of Prescription Stimulants among College Students
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Jason A. Ford and Ryan D. Schroeder
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Prescription drug ,Sociology and Political Science ,Social Psychology ,business.industry ,Public health ,General strain theory ,Alternative medicine ,Clinical Psychology ,Extant taxon ,Medicine ,Illicit drug ,Medical prescription ,business ,Psychiatry ,Law ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Recent research indicates that the prevalence of non-medical prescription drug use is now greater than the prevalence of other illicit drug use, with the exception of marijuana. Existing research focuses on demographic characteristics of users, risk factors and motivations for use, and sources of diversion. A significant gap in the extant literature is an examination of theoretical predictors of use. Using data from the Harvard School of Public Health's College Alcohol Study, the current research addressed this limitation by applying Agnew's general strain theory to the study of non-medical prescription drug use. Specifically, we examine whether academic strain is associated with the non-medical use of prescription stimulants. Findings are supportive of general strain theory, as students who experience academic strain report higher levels of depression, our measure of negative affect, and students who report higher levels of depression are more likely to report the non-medical use of prescription stimulants.
- Published
- 2008
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30. A LIFE-COURSE PERSPECTIVE ON SPIRITUALITY AND DESISTANCE FROM CRIME
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Patrick M. Seffrin, Ryan D. Schroeder, Monica A. Longmore, and Peggy C. Giordano
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media_common.quotation_subject ,Behavior change ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Poison control ,Qualitative property ,Prison ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Religiosity ,Interpersonal ties ,Life course approach ,Psychology ,Law ,Social psychology ,media_common - Abstract
Spirituality is a component of many drug and alcohol treatment strategies, and faith-based programming is also common within prison settings. Yet research on religiosity—crime linkages has often relied on general youth or adult samples or has included a short time line for gauging positive effects. Life-course researchers focused on serious delinquents, in turn, have often emphasized other factors associated with long-term crime patterns, such as marital attachment and job stability, or the criminality of the individual's social ties. This study draws on quantitative and qualitative data derived from a long-term follow-up of a sample of serious adolescent male and female offenders to explore the role of spirituality and religious participation as influences on adult patterns of criminal involvement (N= 152). The respondents were first interviewed as adolescents, in 1982, and again as adults in 1995 and 2003. Results of longitudinal analyses that take into account self-report and incarceration histories at both time periods do not reveal a significant association between these indices of religiosity and the likelihood of evidencing a pattern of sustained desistance. Our analysis of indepth life-history interviews conducted with most respondents over these two time periods and 41 additional interviews focused specifically on spirituality and religion are used to explore in more detail the promise and challenges associated with relying on religiosity as a catalyst for sustained behavior change.
- Published
- 2008
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31. Emotions and Crime over the Life Course: A Neo‐Meadian Perspective on Criminal Continuity and Change
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Peggy C. Giordano, Ryan D. Schroeder, and Stephen A. Cernkovich
- Subjects
Social character ,Sociology and Political Science ,Argument ,Perspective (graphical) ,Self-concept ,Life course approach ,Poison control ,Symbolic interactionism ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Social control ,Developmental psychology - Abstract
A symbolic interactionist perspective on the emotions is presented that highlights their social character, forges links to cognitive processes, and suggests ways in which emotions influence long‐term patterns of criminal involvement. This neo‐Meadian perspective contrasts with theories of desistance that focus on the role of informal social controls and develops the view of an emotional self that flourishes somewhat independent of the major role transitions typically emphasized in sociological studies of the life course. The authors also explore ways in which attention to the emotional realms of experience adds to traditional treatments of the impact of adult transition events (e.g., the “good marriage effect”). Interviews with male and female adolescent offenders and two waves of adult follow‐up data document general patterns of association and support the argument that a social view of emotional processes is critical to a comprehensive understanding of life course patterns of criminal continuity and change.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. DRUG USE AND DESISTANCE PROCESSES
- Author
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Ryan D. Schroeder, Stephen A. Cernkovich, and Peggy C. Giordano
- Subjects
Social network ,business.industry ,Drug culture ,Poison control ,Criminology ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Social dynamics ,Prosocial behavior ,Life course approach ,Informal social control ,business ,Psychology ,Law ,Social control - Abstract
Sampson and Laub's age-graded theory of informal social control emphasizes the importance of adult social bonds such as marriage and stable employment in redirecting behavior in a more prosocial direction. Heavy alcohol use has also been shown to influence persistent patterns of offending as well as more episodic offending across the life course. Sampson and Laub's life-course theory emphasizes the negative impact of alcohol use on marital and employment bonds. Although alcohol has indeed been shown to have significant effects on criminal offending, we argue that drug use and the drug culture in which many contemporary offenders are enmeshed have consequences that often complicate desistance processes in ways that alcohol does not. Drug use and its lifestyle concomitants bring together a host of distinctive social dynamics that compromise multiple life domains. The current project investigates the role of drug use on desistance processes relying on a contemporary sample of previously institutionalized youth. We draw on three waves of data from the Ohio life-course study, a project that spans some 21 years. The results support the assertion that drug use exerts unique effects on desistance processes, once levels of alcohol use are taken into account. We investigate possible mechanisms that help to explain the differential impact of drug use on offending and find that social network effects, particularly partner criminality, explain some but not all of the negative impact of drug use on life-course patterns of criminal offending.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Social Bond Theory
- Author
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Ryan D. Schroeder
- Subjects
Social psychology (sociology) ,Social integration ,Middle range theory ,Social network ,Social exchange theory ,Social philosophy ,business.industry ,Political science ,business ,Social control theory ,Social psychology ,Social structure ,Epistemology - Abstract
Social bond theory is a preeminent perspective in criminology that stresses strong social integration acts as a deterrent to criminal motivations. The development of social bond theory is traced from early sociological theorizing and empirical research that set the foundation for the theory through the introduction of Hirschi's formalized social bond theory of criminology. Research on family processes, schools, and religiosity in support of social bond theory are briefly summarized. Finally, questions that remain to be answered from the social bond theory perspective are discussed. Keywords: education; family; religion; social bond theory; social control theory
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Book Review: The Great American Crime Decline
- Author
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Ryan D. Schroeder
- Subjects
Sociology and Political Science ,Sociology ,Criminology ,Education - Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Family transitions and juvenile delinquency
- Author
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Ryan D, Schroeder, Aurea K, Osgood, and Michael J, Oghia
- Subjects
Family Characteristics ,Jurisprudence ,Single-Parent Family ,Adolescent ,Family Conflict ,Parenting ,Psychology, Adolescent ,History, 20th Century ,History, 21st Century ,Nuclear Family ,Adolescent Behavior ,Juvenile Delinquency ,Humans ,Parent-Child Relations - Abstract
There is a large body of research that shows children from non-intact homes show higher rates of juvenile delinquency than children from intact homes, partially due to weaker parental control and supervision in non-intact homes. What has not been adequately addressed in the research is the influence of changes in family structure among individual adolescents over time on delinquent offending. Using the first and third waves of the National Youth Study, we assess the effect of family structure changes on changes in delinquent offending between waves through the intermediate process of changes in family time and parental attachment. Although prior research has documented adolescents in broken homes are more delinquent than youth in intact homes, the process of family dissolution is not associated with concurrent increases in offending. In contrast, family formation through marriage or cohabitation is associated with simultaneous increases in offending. Changes in family time and parental attachment account for a portion of the family formation effect on delinquency, and prior parental attachment and juvenile offending significantly condition the effect of family formation on offending.
- Published
- 2010
36. The long-term health consequences of relationship violence in adulthood: an examination of low-income women from Boston, Chicago, and San Antonio
- Author
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Lauren M. Kaplan, Ronald J. Angel, Ryan D. Schroeder, Terrence D. Hill, and Christopher Bradley
- Subjects
Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,genetic structures ,Research and Practice ,Health Status ,Poison control ,Suicide prevention ,Sampling Studies ,Sexual coercion ,Young Adult ,Injury prevention ,Medicine ,Humans ,Poverty ,Crime Victims ,Self-rated health ,Aged ,Chicago ,business.industry ,Aggression ,Public health ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Urban Health ,Middle Aged ,Texas ,Sexual abuse ,Spouse Abuse ,Women's Health ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Alcoholic Intoxication ,Stress, Psychological ,Demography ,Boston - Abstract
Objectives. We examined the long-term health consequences of relationship violence in adulthood. Methods. Using data from the Welfare, Children, and Families project (1999 and 2001), a probability sample of 2402 low-income women with children living in disadvantaged neighborhoods in Boston, Massachusetts; Chicago, Illinois; and San Antonio, Texas, we predicted changes in the frequency of intoxication, psychological distress, and self-rated health over 2 years with baseline measures of relationship violence and a host of relevant background variables. Results. Our analyses showed that psychological aggression predicted increases in psychological distress, whereas minor physical assault and sexual coercion predicted increases in the frequency of intoxication. There was no evidence to suggest that relationship violence in adulthood predicted changes in self-rated health. Conclusions. Experiences with relationship violence beyond the formative and developmental years of childhood and adolescence can have far-reaching effects on the health status of disadvantaged urban women.
- Published
- 2009
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