41 results on '"Tara D. Warner"'
Search Results
2. Violent Victimization and Adolescents’ Attitudes Toward Romantic Relationships and Sexual Activity
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Tara D. Warner and David F. Warner
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Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Sexual Behavior ,education ,Bullying ,social sciences ,humanities ,Aggression ,Clinical Psychology ,behavior and behavior mechanisms ,Humans ,Female ,Longitudinal Studies ,Child ,Crime Victims ,health care economics and organizations ,Applied Psychology - Abstract
Violent victimization in adolescence spurs risk-taking behaviors (e.g., violent offending and substance use/abuse), undermines mental well-being, disrupts developmental transitions, and even has interpersonal and relational consequences. Adolescent victims initiate earlier and progress faster through sexual and romantic relationships. Because the reasons for the links between victimization and relationship behaviors remain unclear, we explored how violent victimization might shape how adolescents think and feel about intimate/romantic relationships. We focus specifically on interest in forming relationships and expectations about intimate/sexual activity occurring within relationships. Using data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health; n = 10,570 [54% girls; 56% non-Hispanic white; ages 11–18]), we found that adolescent victims of violence were more pessimistic about marriage and more favorable toward sexual activity, with patterns varying by age at victimization and gender. Late adolescent victims were marginally more interested in romantic relationships but were pessimistic about marriage. Early adolescent and girl victims were less favorable toward sexual activity in relationships, while later adolescent and boy victims were more permissive. Violent victimization may foster problematic attitudes toward intimate relationships, which may account for previously observed increased involvement in risky relational and sex behaviors.
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- 2022
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3. Some fear, more loathing? Threats and anxieties shaping protective gun ownership and gun carry in the U.S
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Trent Steidley and Tara D. Warner
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Gun ownership ,Carry (investment) ,Political science ,Fear of crime ,Racial resentment ,Criminology ,Law ,Article - Abstract
Given notable recent spikes in gun purchases in the U.S., we revisit the ‘fear and loathing’ hypothesis of firearm demand by (1) establishing how crime/victimization fears are shaped by broader economic, cultural, and racial status anxieties (those emerging from group status threats [loathing]) and (2) illustrating how both fear and loathing matter for protective gun ownership and gun carry (among owners), and openness to future protective ownership among non-owners. Using data from a nationwide survey of adults in the U.S. (n = 2,262) collected in 2019, we find that fears of crime and victimization are often more strongly associated with status anxieties than with safety threats. Both status anxieties and victimization are associated with protective ownership and carry. Among non-owners, those higher in cultural anxiety are especially likely to be open toward future protective gun ownership. This study illustrates the multidimensional fear-guns link, wherein both status-related threats and victimization-related fears shape why individuals own guns, and how they use guns.
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- 2021
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4. Contextualizing Adverse Childhood Experiences: The Intersections of Individual and Community Adversity
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Tara D, Warner, Lindsay, Leban, Danielle A, Pester, and Jeffery T, Walker
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Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) are traumatic childhood events that can undermine youth development, and are linked to chronic health problems, mental illness, and risk-taking behaviors in adulthood. ACEs are preventable, yet effective response strategies require comprehensive conceptualization and measurement of adversity. Although typically measured as individual experiences in the family and home (e.g., abuse, neglect), adversity also exists outside the home, in the many contexts in which youth development unfolds (e.g., communities, neighborhoods). Yet, such contexts and experiences are often absent in ACEs research. Using data from a nationally representative youth sample, this study addresses that gap, advancing a measure that contextualizes individual-level ACEs within social and structural domains of community-level adversity. Among 13,267 youth (mean age = 15.25 [range 12-18]; 51% female; 71% White; 13% Black; 10% Hispanic; 3% Asian; 2% American Indian/Multiracial), 61% and 73% were exposed to at least one individual and community ACE, respectively, while 15% of youth reported severe individual ACE exposure (≥3 ACEs) and 20% were exposed to severe (≥3) community ACEs. All ACE exposures were associated with problem behaviors later in adolescence, but youth reporting both severe individual and community ACEs were especially at high risk for later violence, delinquency, and other health-risk behaviors. These findings highlight that community adversity exacerbates the damaging effects of individual/family adversity and thus should be addressed in efforts to prevent ACEs and reduce their long-term harm.
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- 2022
5. To Provide or Protect? Masculinity, Economic Precarity, and Protective Gun Ownership in the United States
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Tara D. Warner, David F. Warner, Tara Leigh Tober, and Tristan Bridges
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050402 sociology ,Sociology and Political Science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Criminology ,Article ,Precarity ,Gun ownership ,0504 sociology ,050903 gender studies ,Masculinity ,Political science ,medicine ,Anxiety ,0509 other social sciences ,medicine.symptom ,media_common - Abstract
Protection is now the modal motivation for gun ownership, and men continue to outnumber women among gun owners. While research has linked economic precarity (e.g., insecurity and anxiety) to gun ownership and attitudes, separating economic well-being from constructions of masculinity is challenging. In response to blocked economic opportunities, some gun owners prioritize armed protection, symbolically replacing the masculine role of “provider” with one associated with “protection.” Thus, understanding both persistently high rates of gun ownership in the United States (in spite of generally declining crime) alongside the gender gap in gun ownership requires deeper investigations into the meaning of guns in the United States and the role of guns in conceptualizations of American masculinity. We use recently collected crowdsourced survey data to test this provider-to-protector shift, exploring how economic precarity may operate as a cultural-level masculinity threat for some, and may intersect with marital/family status to shape gun attitudes and behaviors for both gun owners and nonowners. Results show that investments in stereotypical masculine ideals, rather than economic precarity, are linked to support for discourses associated with protective gun ownership and empowerment.
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- 2022
6. Always at the Ready: Fears, Threats, and Unsafe Gun Storage in Households With Children
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Tara D. Warner
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Adult ,Parents ,Family Characteristics ,Firearms ,Health (social science) ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Humans ,General Medicine ,Fear ,Child ,Law ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine - Abstract
Guns are present in many households in the U.S., including those with children. Safe storage of guns at home can mitigate the increased risks of both the unintentional and intentional injury that in-home gun access presents; yet estimates suggest fewer than half of gun owners store their weapon(s) safely. Unsafe storage in homes with children is especially problematic given that gun-owning parents make incorrect assumptions about both children’s awareness of firearm storage locations, and their actions upon encountering an unsecured gun. There is limited identification and understanding of why some parents do not engage in safe storage practices. Using 2019 survey data from an internet-based sample of gun-owning adults with children at home, this study explores various potential correlates of unsafe storage. Findings suggest that unsafe storage occurs not in response to crime/victimization fears, but from broader, group- and status-based threats. Understanding the complex factors preventing gun-owning parents from implementing safe storage practices has important implications for both victimization scholarship and public health/injury prevention efforts.
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- 2022
7. What Guns Mean: Who Sees Guns as Important, Essential, and Empowering (and Why)?
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Tara D. Warner and Shawn M. Ratcliff
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Sociology and Political Science ,Media studies ,Sociology - Published
- 2021
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8. Gun Ownership and Life Satisfaction in the United States
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Benjamin Dowd-Arrow, Tara D. Warner, Amy M. Burdette, and Terrence D. Hill
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Gun ownership ,General Social Sciences ,Life satisfaction ,Demographic economics ,Psychology - Published
- 2020
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9. Fear, Anxiety, and Expectation: Gender Differences in Openness to Future Gun Ownership
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Tara D. Warner
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Cultural Studies ,Health (social science) ,Social Psychology ,050901 criminology ,05 social sciences ,Fear of crime ,Fear anxiety ,Gender Studies ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Gun ownership ,Openness to experience ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,0509 other social sciences ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
There is extensive research on the correlates of gun ownership; however, less is known about the possible correlates of gun ownership among individuals who do not at present own firearms, but may b...
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- 2020
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10. A Matter of Degree? Fear, Anxiety, and Protective Gun Ownership in the United States
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Courtney R. Thrash and Tara D. Warner
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Distrust ,media_common.quotation_subject ,050901 criminology ,05 social sciences ,General Social Sciences ,Fear of crime ,Fear anxiety ,Risk perception ,Politics ,Gun ownership ,050903 gender studies ,0509 other social sciences ,Worry ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,media_common - Abstract
Objectives This study examines the effect of crime‐specific fears (worry about crime and perceived risk of crime), violent victimization, and diffuse anxieties (belief in a dangerous world [BDW], general distrust, and belief in others’ violent intentions) on protective gun ownership and involvement in “active” gun behaviors (i.e., gun accessibility in the home and handgun carrying). Methods We use data on over 4,000 U.S. adults from the 2017 nationally representative Pew Research Center's American Trends Panel. Results Fear of crime and perceived risks are largely unrelated to gun ownership, yet violent victimization influences protective ownership, which in turn influences gun accessibility. Additionally, diffuse fears and anxieties also matter for protective ownership and accessibility, with some effects explained by political party affiliation. Broader, general distrust of others is associated with owners’ frequency of carrying their handgun outside of the home. Conclusion The results highlight the complexity of the fear‐guns link, with multiple dimensions of fear and experience at work.
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- 2019
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11. Behavioral misperceptions, attitudinal discrepancies, and adolescent alcohol and marijuana use
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Courtney R. Thrash and Tara D. Warner
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Health (social science) ,Marijuana use ,education ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Adolescent alcohol ,Peer effects ,Substance use ,Psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Background: Adolescents’ risk of substance use is shaped by perceptions of peers’ use and peers’ approval, and also by attitudes, values, and behaviors of broader, peer-based, school-level climates...
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- 2019
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12. Seen or Unseen? The Role of Race in Police Contact among Homeless Youth
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Tara D. Warner and Jerreed Ivanich
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Race (biology) ,Increased risk ,050901 criminology ,05 social sciences ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,0509 other social sciences ,Criminology ,Psychology ,human activities ,Law ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine - Abstract
Homeless youth are at an increased risk of police contact—being stopped by police and arrested, yet it is less clear if this interaction is patterned by race. The current study draws on diverse sch...
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- 2018
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13. Adolescent Sexual Risk Taking: The Distribution of Youth Behaviors and Perceived Peer Attitudes Across Neighborhood Contexts
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Tara D. Warner
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Adult ,Male ,Rural Population ,Longitudinal study ,medicine.medical_specialty ,050402 sociology ,Adolescent ,Urban Population ,Sexual Behavior ,media_common.quotation_subject ,education ,Peer Group ,Article ,Developmental psychology ,Hierarchical generalized linear model ,Young Adult ,Risk-Taking ,0504 sociology ,Residence Characteristics ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Longitudinal Studies ,Permissive ,Child ,media_common ,Middle class ,Poverty ,Public health ,05 social sciences ,Multilevel model ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Health Surveys ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Attitude ,Adolescent Behavior ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Normative ,Female ,Perception ,Psychology ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
Purpose Sexual activity is a normative part of adolescent development, yet early sexual debut and sex with multiple partners undermine health and well-being. Both structural (e.g., poverty) and social (e.g., norms) characteristics of neighborhoods shape sexual risk taking, yet scholarship remains focused on urban areas. Thus, this study explores sexually permissive attitudes and sexual risk taking across a wider expanse of neighborhood types. Methods Among 8,337 nonsexually active respondents in Wave I (1994–1995 [ages 11–18]) of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health), a hierarchical linear model and a hierarchical generalized linear model were used to estimate the effect of neighborhood type and permissive sexual climate on youths' sexual debut, age at debut, and lifetime number of sexual partners by Wave III (2001–2002 [ages 18–26]), controlling for individual, familial, and peer factors. Results Sexual climates varied in overall permissiveness and internal consistency both across and within neighborhood types and were linked to increased sexual risk taking. Compared with youth from upper middle class white suburbs, the odds of sexual debut and the number of partners were highest among youth from rural (black and white) neighborhoods; youth from almost all other neighborhood types initiated sex earlier. Conclusions Early sexual debut in adolescence is a public health issue with immediate and long-term implications. Adolescence unfolds in neighborhood environments, the characteristics of which may spur youth into such risk taking. Continued scholarship on sexual risks should consider further variations in the geographic distributions of such risks to investigate more fully their consequences.
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- 2018
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14. Individual, Behavioral, and Situational Correlates of the Drugging Victimization Experiences of College Women
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Christine Lindquist, Tara D. Warner, Bonnie S. Fisher, Sandra L. Martin, Christopher T. Allen, and Christopher Krebs
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education ,05 social sciences ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Binge drinking ,Poison control ,Context (language use) ,social sciences ,Suicide prevention ,Occupational safety and health ,Developmental psychology ,Injury prevention ,050501 criminology ,Situational ethics ,Psychology ,Law ,0505 law - Abstract
Interest in “drugging” has increased, with much focus on drugging victimization within the context of sexual assault and particularly among college students. This study uses data from the Campus Sexual Assault (CSA) Study and the Historically Black College and University Campus Sexual Assault (HBCU-CSA) Study to explore college women’s drugging victimization experiences beyond those limited to drug-facilitated sexual assault. We draw on a lifestyle-exposure/routine activity theory approach to personal victimization integrated with scholarship on gendered opportunities and the campus party culture to examine the individual, behavioral, and situational characteristics embedded in the campus environment that place college women at increased risks of being drugged. We pay particular attention to cultural and institutional differences shaping experiences and risks at predominantly White institutions (PWIs) and Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs). Findings show that 5% and 4% of women at PWIs and HBCUs, respectively, report drugging victimization and that exposure to risky situations (e.g., fraternity party attendance) is a risk factor primarily for women at PWIs.
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- 2017
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15. Cut to the Quick: The Consequences of Youth Violent Victimization for the Timing of Dating Debut and First Union Formation
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Danielle C. Kuhl, David F. Warner, and Tara D. Warner
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Child abuse ,Longitudinal study ,Sociology and Political Science ,Socioemotional selectivity theory ,education ,05 social sciences ,Poison control ,050109 social psychology ,social sciences ,Suicide prevention ,Article ,Developmental psychology ,Child sexual abuse ,Injury prevention ,Life course approach ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychology ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
Concentrated in adolescence, violent victimization is developmentally disruptive. It undermines physical, mental, and socioemotional well-being and compromises youths’ transitions into and progression through key life course tasks. Youth violent victimization (YVV) has been linked to precocious exits from adolescence and premature entries into adulthood. This includes early entry into coresidential romantic unions, which is but one stage of a relationship sequence generally beginning via dating debut. Using data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health) and Cox regression, we examine the effects of YVV on the timing of dating debut and progression to first coresidential unions during adolescence and the transition to adulthood. We pay particular attention to how these effects may be structured by age and gender. Overall, we find that victims begin dating sooner and progress more quickly from dating to first unions than do non-victims. However, youths victimized in early adolescence withdraw from dating and union formation, whereas late adolescent victims appear to overinvest in relationships—at least temporarily—displaying accelerated entry into dating and rapid progression to first unions. We conclude by discussing the implication of these age-graded patterns for intervention efforts and youth well-being more broadly.
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- 2017
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16. Book Review: Communities and Crime: An Enduring American Challenge
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Tara D. Warner
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Sociology ,Law - Published
- 2018
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17. Precocious and Problematic? The Consequences of Youth Violent Victimization for Adolescent Sexual Behavior
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David F. Warner and Tara D. Warner
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Longitudinal study ,Proportional hazards model ,education ,Secondary data ,social sciences ,Interpersonal communication ,humanities ,Article ,Developmental psychology ,Life course approach ,Normative ,Ordered logit ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Psychology ,Law ,health care economics and organizations ,Applied Psychology ,Social policy - Abstract
PURPOSE: Violent victimization is concentrated in adolescence and is disruptive to both the timing and sequencing of key life course transitions that occur during this developmental stage. Drawing on recent work establishing the interpersonal consequences of youth victimization, we examined the effect of violent victimization on adolescents’ timing of sexual debut and involvement in additional sexual risk behaviors (multiple sexual partnering and inconsistent contraceptive use). METHODS: This study relied on secondary data analysis of 10,070 youth from four waves of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health). To predict sexual debut and subsequent sexual risk-taking, analyses were limited to youth not yet sexually active at their wave I interview. RESULTS: Findings from Cox proportional hazards models, negative binomial regression, and repeated measures ordinal logistic regression showed that adolescent victims of violence initiated sex sooner than non-victims and accumulated more sexual partners, but patterns varied by age at victimization. Youth victimized in late adolescence displayed an accelerated trajectory of sexual activity while youth victimized in early adolescence were less likely to debut or engage in other sexual risk behaviors (although younger victims were more likely to engage in other deviant activities). CONCLUSION: Sexual activity is a normative part of adolescent development, yet this study finds that violent victimization may disrupt the timing of this life course task, exacerbating deviant risk-taking and undermining youths’ subsequent well-being. This study also highlights the importance of life course criminology’s attention to timing in lives, given that the consequences of victimization varied by the age when it occurred.
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- 2019
18. Maternal Depressive Symptoms and Adolescent Alcohol Use
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Lissette M. Saavedra, Scott P. Novak, Diana Fishbein, Tara D. Warner, Mindy Herman-Stahl, and Antonio A. Morgan-Lopez
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High rate ,050103 clinical psychology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Coping (psychology) ,Panel design ,Sociology and Political Science ,05 social sciences ,030508 substance abuse ,Adolescent alcohol ,Skill development ,Structural equation modeling ,03 medical and health sciences ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Substance use ,0305 other medical science ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Psychiatry ,Psychology ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Depressive symptoms ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to explore the influence of maternal depressive symptoms on adolescent alcohol use among a sample of Latino/Latina youth aged 10 to 16 years from a high-risk community. Direct and mediating effects of youth depressive symptoms, controlling for levels of concurrent emotion dysregulation, on alcohol use were examined. Participants consisted of 525 children and their mothers randomly sampled from low-income schools with high rates of substance use. The panel design included four waves, and we used structural equation modeling with a longitudinal mediational framework. Results indicated that the relationship between maternal depressive symptoms and adolescent alcohol use was mediated by adolescents’ symptoms of depression for girls only. Findings are discussed in the context of the development of skills to cope with negative affect and the influence parental depressive symptoms may have on this process.
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- 2016
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19. The Geography of Normative Climates: An Application to Adolescent Substance Use
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Courtney R. Thrash and Tara D. Warner
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Male ,Adolescent ,Social Psychology ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Protective factor ,030508 substance abuse ,Poison control ,Rural Health ,Social Environment ,Suicide prevention ,Education ,Developmental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Risk-Taking ,Social Norms ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Peer Influence ,Students ,Schools ,05 social sciences ,Urban Health ,Social environment ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Nebraska ,Health Surveys ,Legal psychology ,Health psychology ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Adolescent Behavior ,Normative ,Female ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology ,Attitude to Health ,Social psychology ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
The existing research on risk factors for adolescent substance use highlights the importance of peers' direct influence on risky behaviors, yet two key limitations persist. First, there is considerably less attention to the ways in which peers shape overall (e.g., school-level) normative climates of attitudes and expectations about substance use, and, second, the role of the broader geographic contexts in which these climates are embedded is essentially neglected. In light of shifting trends in geographic differences in adolescent substance use, the current study uses data from the 2007 Nebraska Risk and Protective Factor Student Survey (n = 26,647; 80 % non-Hispanic White; 51 % female) to (a) explore whether geographic context shapes the character (permissiveness) and consistency (homogeneity) of normative climates and (b) examine the consequences (effects) of such climates on adolescent substance use risk across the rural-urban continuum. Normative climates are a consistent predictor of substance use, yet the geographic context in which schools are located matters for both the nature and influence of these climates, and the patterns differ between normative climates about alcohol and marijuana. These findings illustrate that school normative climates do indeed matter for substance use behavior, and the ways in which they do depend on their broader, geographic context. Thus, future research on youth's substance use should be attuned to these more nuanced distinctions.
- Published
- 2016
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20. Adolescent Survival Expectations
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Tara D. Warner and Raymond R. Swisher
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Adult ,Male ,Gerontology ,Longitudinal study ,Adolescent ,Social Psychology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health ,Immigration ,Ethnic group ,Emigrants and Immigrants ,Poison control ,Violence ,Suicide prevention ,Occupational safety and health ,Young Adult ,Residence Characteristics ,Injury prevention ,Humans ,Medicine ,Family ,media_common ,business.industry ,Racial Groups ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Survival Rate ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Life course approach ,Female ,business ,Demography - Abstract
Adolescent survival expectations are linked to a range of problem behaviors, poor health, and later socioeconomic disadvantage, yet scholars have not examined how survival expectations are differentially patterned by race, ethnicity, and/or nativity. This is a critical omission given that many risk factors for low survival expectations are themselves stratified by race and ethnicity. Using the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health, we modeled racial, ethnic, and immigrant group differences in trajectories of adolescent survival expectations and assess whether these differences are accounted for by family, neighborhood, and/or other risk factors (e.g., health care access, substance use, exposure to violence). Findings indicated that most racial, ethnic, and immigrant groups were more pessimistic about their survival than were non-Hispanic whites, with the exception of Cuban youth, who were the most optimistic. Foreign-born Mexican youth had the lowest survival expectations, contrary to expectations from the “healthy-immigrant” hypothesis.
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- 2015
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21. INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE RISK AMONG VICTIMS OF YOUTH VIOLENCE: ARE EARLY UNIONS BAD, BENEFICIAL, OR BENIGN?
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Tara D. Warner, David F. Warner, and Danielle C. Kuhl
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Longitudinal study ,education ,Poison control ,Human factors and ergonomics ,social sciences ,Suicide prevention ,humanities ,Occupational safety and health ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Developmental psychology ,Prosocial behavior ,Injury prevention ,behavior and behavior mechanisms ,Domestic violence ,Psychology ,Law ,Social psychology ,health care economics and organizations - Abstract
Youth violent victimization (YVV) is a risk factor for precocious exits from adolescence via early coresidential union formation. It remains unclear, however, whether these early unions 1) are associated with intimate partner violence (IPV) victimization, 2) interrupt victim continuity or victim-offender overlap through protective and prosocial bonds, or 3) are inconsequential. By using data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (N = 11,928; 18-34 years of age), we examine competing hypotheses for the effect of early union timing among victims of youth violence (n = 2,479)-differentiating across victimization only, perpetration only, and mutually combative relationships and considering variation by gender. The results from multinomial logistic regression models indicate that YVV increases the risk of IPV victimization in first unions, regardless of union timing; the null effect of timing indicates that delaying union formation would not reduce youth victims' increased risk of continued victimization. Gender-stratified analyses reveal that earlier unions can protect women against IPV perpetration, but this is partly the result of an increased risk of IPV victimization. The findings suggest that YVV has significant transformative consequences, leading to subsequent victimization by coresidential partners, and this association might be exacerbated among female victims who form early unions. We conclude by discussing directions for future research.
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- 2015
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22. The Effect of Direct and Indirect Exposure to Violence on Youth Survival Expectations
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Raymond R. Swisher and Tara D. Warner
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Attitude to Death ,Adolescent ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Poison control ,Violence ,Suicide prevention ,Occupational safety and health ,Optimism ,Risk Factors ,Injury prevention ,medicine ,Humans ,Interpersonal Relations ,Longitudinal Studies ,media_common ,Public health ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Physical abuse ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Female ,Psychology ,Clinical psychology ,Adolescent health - Abstract
Research finds that adolescents gravely overestimate their risk of death and that these pessimistic attitudes correlate with risky behaviors undermining health and well-being; however, it remains unclear why adolescents have negative expectations about their survival. Because youth are most likely to be exposed to violence (as victims and/or witnesses), perhaps these experiences are key in undermining expectations about the future. We explored the effect of direct and indirect exposures to violence-across various contexts-on adolescents' survival expectations.Using data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health, we tested the effect of violent experiences: individual direct and vicarious violence, familial and relational violence, school violence, and community violence on adolescents' expectations of surviving to 35 years of age.Victims of childhood physical abuse were less likely to expect to survive to 35 years of age. Although not significant at the conventional p.05 level, violent victimization (being jumped, cut/stabbed, shot, or threatened with a weapon) and intimate partner violence were marginally associated with decreased survival expectations (p.10). School and community violence undermined expectations at the bivariate level, but became nonsignificant after adjustments for individual demographic characteristics.Violent victimization in childhood and adolescence is a public health issue with both immediate and long-term consequences. Violence exposure severely compromises individuals' optimism about the future and places them at risk for behaviors that can further undermine well-being. Practitioners should be mindful of diminished survival expectations as a less overt consequence of exposure to violence.
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- 2014
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23. Adolescent Entertainment or Violence Training? The Hunger Games
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Eva 'Dee' Sloan, Tara D. Warner, Lisa A. Jones, and Cheryl Sawyer
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Entertainment ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Imaginary audience ,Content (Freudian dream analysis) ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Training (civil) ,GeneralLiterature_MISCELLANEOUS ,The Imaginary ,The Hunger Games ,Personal fable - Abstract
Adolescence is a time of tremendous growth and development, both physically and emotionally. During this time, the adolescent is impressionable, especially from those they view as role models or whom they admire. Although intended as entertainment, the content and violence used in The Hunger Games has the potential to impact the concepts of the imaginary audience and personal fable that are prominent during adolescence. With this in mind, the authors provide a movie review of The Hunger Games and caution against allowing young audiences to view movies with such strong content without a discussion with them about the content of the movie. Finally, the authors will provide counseling implications and suggestions in working with adolescents who view movies and other forms of entertainment with similar content as that portrayed in The Hunger Games.
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- 2014
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24. Why Neighborhoods (and How We Study Them) Matter for Adolescent Development
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R. A. Settersten and Tara D. Warner
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Longitudinal study ,050402 sociology ,Adolescent ,Social Values ,Ethnic group ,Aspirations, Psychological ,Psychosocial Deprivation ,Poison control ,Life chances ,Violence ,Social Environment ,Social class ,Article ,Developmental psychology ,Life Change Events ,Social Facilitation ,0504 sociology ,Residence Characteristics ,Ethnicity ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Poverty ,Crime Victims ,Socialization ,05 social sciences ,Social Support ,Social Control, Informal ,social sciences ,Adolescent Development ,Social stratification ,Human development (humanity) ,Adolescent Behavior ,Life course approach ,Psychology ,human activities ,Social psychology ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
Adolescence is a sensitive developmental period marked by significant changes that unfold across multiple contexts. As a central context of development, neighborhoods capture—in both physical and social space—the stratification of life chances and differential distribution of resources and risks. For some youth, neighborhoods are springboards to opportunities; for others, they are snares that constrain progress and limit the ability to avoid risks. Despite abundant research on “neighborhood effects,” scant attention has been paid to how neighborhoods are a product of social stratification forces that operate simultaneously to affect human development. Neighborhoods in the United States are the manifestation of three intersecting social structural cleavages: race/ethnicity, socioeconomic class, and geography. Many opportunities are allocated or denied along these three cleavages. To capture these joint processes, we advocate a “neighborhood-centered” approach to study the effects of neighborhoods on adolescent development. Using nationally representative data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health), we demonstrate the complex ways that these three cleavages shape specific neighborhood contexts and can result in stark differences in well-being. A neighborhood-centered approach demands more rigorous and sensitive theories of place, as well as multidimensional classification and measures. We discuss an agenda to advance the state of theories and research, drawing explicit attention to the stratifying forces that bring about distinct neighborhood types that shape developmental trajectories during adolescence and beyond.
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- 2017
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25. The Association Between Different Types of Intimate Partner Violence Experienced by Women
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Christopher Krebs, Angela Browne, Matthew J. Breiding, and Tara D. Warner
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education.field_of_study ,Intimate partner ,Sexual violence ,Sociology and Political Science ,Aggression ,education ,Population ,social sciences ,Legal psychology ,Clinical Psychology ,medicine ,Domestic violence ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Association (psychology) ,Law ,Social psychology ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Stalking ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Those who experience intimate partner violence (IPV) are often subjected to multiple types of victimization such as physical violence, sexual violence, psychological aggression, and stalking. However, relatively few studies have used a national population-based sample and multivariate methods to analyze the associations between these different types of violence. This study uses multivariate methods to analyze a national population-based sample of women in order to document empirically the extent to which different types of IPV overlap, while controlling for personal and behavioral characteristics. Results indicated significant levels of overlap, with victims often experiencing more than one type of victimization by an intimate partner. Findings also indicated that women who had experienced violence by non-intimate partners were often more likely to experience violence by intimates. Finally, women who had experienced stalking by an intimate were more likely to experience more forms of IPV on average than those who had experienced physical violence, sexual violence, or emotional aggression.
- Published
- 2011
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26. Policing Juveniles
- Author
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Margaret A. Zahn, Kevin J. Strom, Lisa Tichavsky, and Tara D. Warner
- Subjects
Poison control ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Criminology ,medicine.disease ,Suicide prevention ,Occupational safety and health ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Injury prevention ,medicine ,Juvenile delinquency ,Domestic violence ,Juvenile ,Medical emergency ,Psychology ,Law - Abstract
This study analyzed the National Incident Based Reporting System data from 2000 to 2004 to determine how domestic violence arrest policies, along with incident, offender, and victim characteristics, influence arrest outcomes in violent incidents committed by juveniles against their parents. The authors’ primary interest was to assess whether the enforcement of domestic violence arrest laws, coupled with increased police involvement in familial disputes, has contributed to the decreasing gender gap in juvenile arrests for violent offenses. Results indicated that domestic violence arrest policies had positive effects on arrest outcomes both for juvenile females and males accused of assaulting a parent, as juveniles were more likely to be arrested in states with mandatory or pro-arrest policies than in states with discretionary arrest policies. However, there was also evidence that, beyond the effects of the domestic arrest laws, girls became increasingly more likely to be arrested for assaults against parents over the 5-year study period relative to boys. The implications for these findings are discussed, including the importance of a better understanding of how police respond to domestic violence incidents involving juveniles.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. The risk of assimilating? Alcohol use among immigrant and U.S.-born Mexican youth
- Author
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Tara D. Warner, Christopher Krebs, and Diana Fishbein
- Subjects
Minority group ,Sociology and Political Science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Immigration ,Ethnic group ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Poison control ,Suicide prevention ,Article ,Acculturation ,Education ,Environmental health ,Injury prevention ,Psychology ,Demography ,media_common - Abstract
Rising rates of substance use among Hispanic youth, coupled with substantial growth of this minority group, merit grounds for concern. The process of assimilation is frequently examined in studies of Hispanic substance use and has been cited as a reason for higher rates of substance use by U.S.-born Hispanics, compared to their foreign-born peers. However, many previous studies use individual or unidimensional measures of assimilation, when this term is multifaceted, representing different concepts. The current study addresses this gap by testing the longitudinal effect of different assimilation processes (acculturation as well as structural, spatial, and straight-line assimilation), while simultaneously controlling for important familial and social risk and protective factors on the likelihood of alcohol use among U.S.-born Mexican and Mexican immigrant youth. Results indicate that, although alcohol use is higher among immigrant youth, assimilation measures do not predict alcohol use for immigrants or U.S.-born youth. We conclude that the effects of assimilation may vary by person and place, particularly in ethnic enclaves, and suggest the use of measures that incorporate cultural, personal, social, and environmental factors.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Violent Acts and Injurious Consequences: An Examination of Competing Hypotheses About Intimate Partner Violence Using Agency-Based Data
- Author
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Tara D. Warner
- Subjects
Sociology and Political Science ,education ,Identity (social science) ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Poison control ,social sciences ,Suicide prevention ,humanities ,Legal psychology ,Clinical Psychology ,Injury prevention ,Agency (sociology) ,Domestic violence ,Psychology ,Law ,Social psychology ,health care economics and organizations ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) - Abstract
The current study proposed and tested a series of competing hypotheses about intimate partner violence in the 2006 National Incident Based Reporting System (NIBRS), a dataset of criminal incidents known to the police. Three research questions were presented concerning gender differences in victim identity, victim-offender relationships, and victim injury with hypotheses derived from the feminist, family violence, and general violence perspectives. Victim-based analyses were consistent primarily with expectations of the feminist perspective, although aspects of the general violence perspective were supported as well: Women were more likely than men to experience violence from an intimate; they were more likely to experience violence from an intimate partner than from any other perpetrator; and when victimized by an intimate, women were usually more likely to be injured. These results highlight the uniqueness of violence between intimates relative to other types of violence.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. The Differential Risk Factors of Physically Forced and Alcohol- or Other Drug-Enabled Sexual Assault Among University Women
- Author
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Christopher Krebs, Christine Lindquist, Tara D. Warner, Bonnie S. Fisher, and Sandra L. Martin
- Subjects
Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Health (social science) ,Alcohol Drinking ,Universities ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Poison control ,Suicide prevention ,Occupational safety and health ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Young Adult ,Risk Factors ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Injury prevention ,Prevalence ,medicine ,Humans ,Interpersonal Relations ,Students ,Psychiatry ,Crime Victims ,Sexual assault ,Sexual violence ,business.industry ,Human factors and ergonomics ,social sciences ,General Medicine ,Odds ratio ,United States ,Spouse Abuse ,Women's Health ,Female ,business ,Attitude to Health ,Law - Abstract
The Campus Sexual Assault Study examined whether undergraduate women’s victimization experiences prior to college and lifestyle activities during college were differentially associated with the type of sexual assault they experienced: physically forced sexual assault and incapacitated sexual assault. Self-reported data collected using a Web-based survey administered to more than 5,000 undergraduate women at two large public universities indicated that victimization experiences before college were differentially associated with the risk of experiencing these two types of sexual assault during college. Women who experienced forced sexual assault before college were at very high risk of experiencing forced sexual assault during college (odds ratio [OR] = 6.6). Women who experienced incapacitated sexual assault before college were also at very high risk of experiencing incapacitated sexual assault during college (OR = 3.7). Moreover, women’s substance use behaviors during college, including getting drunk and using marijuana, were strongly associated with experiencing incapacitated sexual assault but were not associated with experiencing forced sexual assault. Implications for education and prevention programs, as well as future research directions, are discussed.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. An Exploration of Treatment and Supervision Intensity Among Drug Court and Non-Drug Court Participants
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Pamela K. Lattimore, Christopher Krebs, Christine Lindquist, and Tara D. Warner
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Program evaluation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Recidivism ,business.industry ,Drug court ,Rehabilitation ,Law enforcement ,Exploratory analysis ,medicine.disease ,Substance abuse ,Medicine ,Substance use ,Substance abuse treatment ,business ,Psychiatry ,Law - Abstract
Evidence is accumulating that drug court programs appear effective in reducing the substance use and recidivism of drug-involved offenders. As there is no single drug court model, programs vary from site to site and the extent to which individual programs are fully implemented is not well documented. The extent to which drug court programs deliver more extensive services to individual offenders than to comparable individuals not participating in drug courts is also not well understood. This paper presents an exploratory analysis of the supervision and treatment delivered to a sample of individuals participating in drug courts in Broward and Hillsborough counties, Florida, and to a sample of comparable drug-involved individuals who were sentenced to probation. Data are from in-person interviews conducted shortly after program entry and nine months following the “baseline” interview. Results suggest that the intensity of supervision and the likelihood of treatment were greater for those involved in drug cou...
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Closing the Revolving Door?
- Author
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John H. Kramer and Tara D. Warner
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Recidivism ,business.industry ,Prison overcrowding ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Poison control ,Rearrest ,Computer security ,computer.software_genre ,Suicide prevention ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Sentencing guidelines ,Medicine ,business ,Psychiatry ,Law ,computer ,General Psychology ,Criminal justice - Abstract
The criminal justice system is often viewed as a revolving door for drug-dependent offenders due to its failure to recognize the association between addiction and offending, and repeated incarceration of drug-dependent offenders has contributed to prison overcrowding. The authors evaluated the effectiveness of Pennsylvania's drug and alcohol treatment-based intermediate punishment, Restrictive Intermediate Punishments (RIP/D&A), at reducing the risk of rearrest. Rearrest was compared at 12, 24, and 36 months postrelease. Offenders who successfully completed treatment had a lower risk of rearrest than traditionally sentenced offenders in general and county jail and probation offenders specifically. However, offenders sentenced to RIP/D&A who did not successfully complete treatment were more at risk for rearrest than traditionally sentenced offenders in general. Also, offenders sentenced to state incarceration had a lower risk of rearrest than RIP/D&A participants, regardless of program completion.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Perceiving the Risk of Substance Use: The Roles of Nativity, Acculturation, and Family Support among Hispanic Children
- Author
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Christopher Krebs, Tara D. Warner, and Diana Fishbein
- Subjects
Risk perception ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Health (social science) ,Longitudinal data ,Family support ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Substance use ,Positive Youth Development ,Psychology ,Acculturation ,Cicero ,Developmental psychology - Abstract
The prevalence of substance use behavior and the personal characteristics and social and cultural factors that influence substance use among children have been studied extensively. However, much less attention has been directed at the attitudes towards, and particularly the perceived risks of, using substances, and even less research has focused on Hispanic youth, whose rates of substance use have been increasing. Understanding what factors are associated with perceived risk is important because there is evidence that perceived risk is associated with subsequent substance use. The current study uses longitudinal data collected from 553 children in the Cicero Youth Development (CYD) Project to identify individual and environmental factors associated with the perceived risk of substance use. We pay particular attention to dimensions of nativity and acculturation in an effort to determine whether there are differences in risk perception between U.S.-born Hispanic children and their foreign-born counterparts. Results indicate that a number of factors are associated with perceived risk, including family support, parent-child communication, peer substance use, and child temperament. Additionally, U.S.-born Hispanics perceive substances as less risky than immigrants, and among immigrants, length of time in the U. S. is negatively associated with perceiving great risk in substance use. Implications for policy and prevention strategies are discussed.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Up in Smoke: Neighborhood Contexts of Marijuana Use from Adolescence Through Young Adulthood
- Author
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Tara D. Warner
- Subjects
Male ,Longitudinal study ,Social Psychology ,Adolescent ,Ethnic group ,Poison control ,Marijuana Smoking ,Social class ,Peer Group ,Education ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Residence Characteristics ,Risk Factors ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Ethnicity ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Longitudinal Studies ,Latent growth modeling ,05 social sciences ,Racial Groups ,Peer group ,Latent class model ,Health psychology ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Adolescent Behavior ,Female ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Demography - Abstract
The current understanding of the neighborhood contexts wherein adolescent substance use emerges remains limited by conflicting findings regarding geographic variation in, and neighborhood effects on, both the prevalence of and risk factors for such use. Using four waves of longitudinal data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health [n = 18,697 (51 % female, 54 % White, 24 % Black, 16 % Hispanic, 7 % Asian, 2 % American Indian/Other)], latent class analysis, and growth curve modeling, this study identified distinct neighborhood types—patterned by race/ethnicity, socioeconomic class, and geography—and explored how trajectories of adolescent and young adult marijuana use differed across neighborhood types. The results demonstrated complexity in neighborhood contexts, illustrating variation in trajectories of marijuana use across neighborhood types heretofore unobserved in neighborhoods research, and largely unexplained by key individual, family, and peer risk and protective factors. This approach highlights how social structural forces intersect and anchor trajectories of youth substance-using risk behavior.
- Published
- 2015
34. IF THEY GROW UP: EXPLORING THE NEIGHBORHOOD CONTEXT OF ADOLESCENT AND YOUNG ADULT SURVIVAL EXPECTATIONS
- Author
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Tara D. Warner and Raymond R. Swisher
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,Gerontology ,Longitudinal study ,Poison control ,Suicide prevention ,Occupational safety and health ,Health equity ,Article ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Injury prevention ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Young adult ,Psychology ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Adolescent health - Abstract
Using data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health, this paper examines individual and neighborhood predictors of adolescent and young adult survival expectations - their confidence of surviving to age 35. Analyses revealed that within-person increases in depression and violent perpetration decreased the odds of expecting to survive. Individuals who rated themselves in good health and received routine physical care had greater survival expectations. Consistent with documented health disparities, Black and Hispanic youth had lower survival expectations than did their White peers. Neighborhood poverty was linked to diminished survival expectations both within and between persons, with the between person association remaining significant controlling for mental and physical health, exposure to violence, own violence, and a wide range of socio-demographic factors. Language: en
- Published
- 2013
35. RELATIONSHIP FORMATION AND STABILITY IN EMERGING ADULTHOOD: DO SEX RATIOS MATTER?
- Author
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Tara D. Warner, Monica A. Longmore, Wendy D. Manning, and Peggy C. Giordano
- Subjects
History ,Interpersonal relationship ,Sociology and Political Science ,Marital satisfaction ,Relationship formation ,Anthropology ,Cheating ,social sciences ,Young adult ,Psychology ,Article ,Odds ,Developmental psychology - Abstract
Research links sex ratios with the likelihood of marriage and divorce. However, whether sex ratios similarly influence precursors to marriage (transitions in and out of dating or cohabiting relationships) is unknown. Utilizing data from the Toledo Adolescent Relationships Study and the 2000 U.S. Census, this study assesses whether sex ratios influence the formation and stability of emerging adults' romantic relationships. Findings show that relationship formation is unaffected by partner availability, yet the presence of partners increases women's odds of cohabiting, decreases men's odds of cohabiting, and increases number of dating partners and cheating among men. It appears that sex ratios influence not only transitions in and out of marriage, but also the process through which individuals search for and evaluate partners prior to marriage.
- Published
- 2013
36. Everybody's Doin' It (Right?): Neighborhood Norms and Sexual Activity in Adolescence
- Author
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Wendy D. Manning, Tara D. Warner, Peggy C. Giordano, and Monica A. Longmore
- Subjects
Sociology and Political Science ,Casual ,Poverty ,Article ,Education ,Developmental psychology ,Odds ,Normative social influence ,Sexual behavior ,Normative ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Disadvantage ,Adolescent health - Abstract
A neighborhood’s normative climate is linked to, but conceptually distinct from, its structural characteristics such as poverty and racial/ethnic composition. Given the deleterious consequences of early sexual activity for adolescent health and well-being, it is important to assess normative influences on youth behaviors such as sexual debut, number of sex partners, and involvement in casual sexual experiences. The current study moves beyond prior research by constructing a measure of normative climate that more fully captures neighborhood norms, and analyzing the influence of normative climate on behavior in a longitudinal framework. Using recently geo-coded data from the Toledo Adolescent Relationships Study (TARS), we analyze the effect of normative climate on adolescents’ sexual behaviors. Results indicate that variation in neighborhood normative climates increases adolescents’ odds of sexual debut and casual sex, and is associated with their number of sex partners, even after accounting for neighborhood structural disadvantage and demographic risk factors.
- Published
- 2012
37. Comparing sexual assault prevalence estimates obtained with direct and indirect questioning techniques
- Author
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Sandra L. Martin, Tara D. Warner, Christine Lindquist, Bonnie S. Fisher, James M. Childers, and Christopher Krebs
- Subjects
Male ,Sociology and Political Science ,business.industry ,Data Collection ,Direct questioning ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Poison control ,Sample (statistics) ,Suicide prevention ,Occupational safety and health ,Gender Studies ,Young Adult ,Rape ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Injury prevention ,Prevalence ,Medicine ,Humans ,Female ,Self Report ,business ,Law ,Social psychology ,Crime Victims ,Sexual assault - Abstract
Concerns have been expressed about the validity of self-reported data on sexual assault, as victims might be reluctant to disclose what happened to them. In this study, using an anonymous, web-based survey, a sample of 5,446 undergraduate women were asked about their experiences with physically forced sexual assault using both direct and indirect questioning methods. The prevalence of physically forced sexual assault obtained via indirect questioning was slightly higher than, though not substantially or statistically different from, the estimate obtained via direct questioning. The results suggest that either direct questioning yields reasonably valid estimates of the prevalence of sexual assault or that the item count technique does not produce estimates that are any more valid.
- Published
- 2011
38. The Mediating Effect of Depressive Symptoms on the Relationship between Traumatic Childhood Experiences and Drug Use Initiation
- Author
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Jane Hammond, Scott P. Novak, Tara D. Warner, Christopher Krebs, and Diana Fishbein
- Subjects
Drug ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Mediation (statistics) ,Adolescent ,Substance-Related Disorders ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Toxicology ,Article ,Life Change Events ,Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic ,Risk Factors ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Psychiatry ,Prospective cohort study ,Child ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Depressive symptoms ,media_common ,Change score ,Depressive Disorder ,Models, Statistical ,Depression ,Stressor ,Hispanic or Latino ,Causality ,United States ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Female ,Psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Stressful experiences such as childhood trauma and depressive symptoms have both been implicated in the initiation of drug use; however, longitudinal designs have not yet been used to elucidate their respective roles to better understand the causal sequence. In the present study, a sensitivity analysis was conducted using two mediation strategies to examine how this sequence may differ by various levels of statistical control, including (1) the standard mediational model in which the effect of lifetime traumatic stressors (Year 1) on the onset of drug use (Years 3 and 4) is mediated by levels of depressive symptoms (Year 2); and (2) a stronger test of causality such that the effect of lifetime traumatic stressors (Year 1) on the onset of drug use (Years 3 and 4) was mediated by changes in depressive symptoms (Year 1 to 2), measured by a residualized change score that controlled for levels in Year 1. Two types of trauma were studied in a community-based study of 489 Hispanic preadolescents (aged 10–12): (a) the number of lifetime traumatic stressors and (b) seven specific lifetime stressors. We also controlled for new onset traumatic stressors occurring between Years 1 and 2. Primary findings indicate that drug use initiation during early adolescence (e.g., ages 14–16) may not be tied to immediate proximal perturbations in risk factors, such as traumatic experiences and depressive symptoms. Rather, the effects of trauma on depression in this sample appear to be established earlier in childhood (ages 10–14 or younger) and persist in a relatively stable manner into middle adolescence when the risk for drug use may be heightened.
- Published
- 2011
39. Women's sexual orientations and their experiences of sexual assault before and during university
- Author
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Tara D. Warner, Sandra L. Martin, Bonnie S. Fisher, Christine Lindquist, and Christopher Krebs
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Health (social science) ,Adolescent ,Universities ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Poison control ,Suicide prevention ,Occupational safety and health ,Young Adult ,Maternity and Midwifery ,Injury prevention ,Odds Ratio ,Prevalence ,Medicine ,Humans ,Homosexuality ,Young adult ,Heterosexuality ,media_common ,business.industry ,Data Collection ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Homosexuality, Female ,social sciences ,United States ,Logistic Models ,Rape ,Bisexuality ,Female ,Self Report ,Lesbian ,business ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Purpose We sought to examine relationships between women's sexual orientations and their sexual assault experiences before and during university. Methods Self-reported responses on a web-based survey of 5,439 female undergraduates who participated in the Campus Sexual Assault study were analyzed to compare three groups: bisexuals, lesbians, and heterosexuals. Groups were compared in terms of the prevalence of sexual assault before and during university, and the extent to which sexual assault before university predicted sexual assault during university. Findings The prevalence of sexual assault before and during university was higher among bisexuals and lesbians compared with heterosexuals (25.4% of bisexuals, 22.4% of lesbians, and 10.7% of heterosexuals were sexually assaulted before university; 24.0% of bisexuals, 17.9% of lesbians, and 13.3% of heterosexuals were sexually assaulted during university). Sexual assault before university was highly predictive of sexual assault during university, especially among non-heterosexuals. Compared with heterosexuals not sexually assaulted before university (the referent group), previously assaulted non-heterosexuals (bisexuals/lesbians) had eight times the odds of sexual assault during university (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] = 8.75), whereas previously assaulted heterosexuals had four times the odds of sexual assault during university (AOR, 4.40). However, there was no difference in the odds of sexual assault during university between non-heterosexuals not sexually assaulted before university and heterosexuals not sexually assaulted before university. Conclusion Bisexual and lesbian women are more likely than heterosexual women to be sexually assaulted before and during university. Sexual assault before university is linked to sexual assault during university for all women, with this association being especially pronounced among non-heterosexuals.
- Published
- 2010
40. College women's experiences with physically forced, alcohol- or other drug-enabled, and drug-facilitated sexual assault before and since entering college
- Author
-
Bonnie S. Fisher, Christopher Krebs, Christine Lindquist, Tara D. Warner, and Sandra L. Martin
- Subjects
Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Alcohol Drinking ,Universities ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Poison control ,Suicide prevention ,Occupational safety and health ,Risk-Taking ,Injury prevention ,Dangerous Behavior ,medicine ,Drug facilitated sexual assault ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Psychiatry ,Students ,Crime Victims ,business.industry ,Sex Offenses ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Sexual abuse ,Female ,Sex offense ,business - Abstract
Research has shown associations between college women's alcohol and/or drug consumption and the risk of sexual assault, but few studies have measured the various means by which sexual assault is achieved.The authors' Campus Sexual Assault Study obtained self-report data from a random sample of undergraduate women (N = 5,446).The authors collected data on sexual assault victimization by using a cross-sectional, Web-based survey, and they conducted analyses assessing the role of substance use. The authors also compared victimizations before and during college, and across years of study.Findings indicate that almost 20% of undergraduate women experienced some type of completed sexual assault since entering college. Most sexual assaults occurred after women voluntarily consumed alcohol, whereas few occurred after women had been given a drug without their knowledge or consent.The authors discuss implications for campus sexual assault prevention programs, including the need for integrated substance use and sexual victimization prevention programming.
- Published
- 2009
41. Differential relationships between personal and community stressors and children's neurocognitive functioning
- Author
-
Diana Fishbein, Tara D. Warner, Nancy Trevarthen, Christopher Krebs, Jane Hammond, and Barbara Flannery
- Subjects
Child abuse ,Male ,Substance-Related Disorders ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Developmental Disabilities ,Emotions ,Poison control ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Violence ,Impulsivity ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Risk Assessment ,White People ,Developmental psychology ,Neglect ,Life Change Events ,Executive Function ,Residence Characteristics ,Adaptation, Psychological ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Humans ,Child Abuse ,Longitudinal Studies ,Child ,Problem Solving ,media_common ,Personal Construct Theory ,Parenting ,Cognitive flexibility ,Cognition ,Hispanic or Latino ,Physical abuse ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Female ,Illinois ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Cognition Disorders ,Neurocognitive ,psychological phenomena and processes ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Early adversity can alter development of neurocognition, including executive cognitive and emotional regulatory functions. This is the first study to explore differential relationships between personal (physical and emotional abuse and neglect, school and parental stressors) and community (neighborhood problems and witnessing neighborhood violence) stressors and neurocognition. Predominantly Latino children ( n = 553) aged 10 to 12 years completed tasks measuring intelligence, impulsivity, problem solving, cognitive flexibility, decision making, and emotion attributions. Adjusting for age and parent education, bivariate regression analyses found exposure to personal stressors to be associated with relative deficits in at least one neurocognitive function. Community stressors were related to relative deficits in emotion attributions and problem solving. In multivariate analyses, neglect was related to misattributions of emotion and IQ deficits, and physical abuse was related to problem solving. Community stressors were not correlated with neurocognition when viewed relative to personal stressors. Stressor types were differentially associated with performance on specific neurocognitive tasks.
- Published
- 2008
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