1965
DOI: 10.2307/2090970
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A Note on Self-Concept as an Insulator Against Delinquency

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Cited by 52 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…Second, the degree of powerlessness was measured through Neal and Seeman's scale (1964). Finally, self esteem was measured by a semantic differential scale (Schwartz and Tangri, 1965). These personality factors are helpful in the analysis of status in-consistency responses within Geschwender's framework of coping-noncoping techniques.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Second, the degree of powerlessness was measured through Neal and Seeman's scale (1964). Finally, self esteem was measured by a semantic differential scale (Schwartz and Tangri, 1965). These personality factors are helpful in the analysis of status in-consistency responses within Geschwender's framework of coping-noncoping techniques.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A questionnaire including a semantic differential scale devised by Schwartz and Tangri (4) was used in which the respondent was asked to rate himself on each of 10 sets of bipolar adjectives (e.g., I am: good ... bad; useful ... useless). These same scales were used to determine ea.ch boy's expectation of how his significant others evaluated him (my mother thinks I am .…”
Section: B Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…From the second perspective, socialization-control analyses-and particularly in the early and later development of containment theory (Reckless, 1967;Schwartz & Tangri, 1965)-self-concept was treated as a developing personality variable rather than as an interactional process intervening between individual and group-level events. A favorable selfconcept, as a mechanism of inner containment and as an insulator against deviance, was introduced to explain deviance along with the previously propounded social control factors (i.e., socially institutionalized structures of inducements and constraints).…”
Section: The Integrative Theory and Other Deviance Theoriesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the context of control theories (Briar & Piliavin, 1965;Hirschi, 1969;Polk & Halferty, 1966) and containment perspectives (Reckless, 1967;Reckless, Dinitz, & Murray, 1956;Schwartz & Tangri, 1965;Voss, 1969), impulses toward deviant responses are checked by a variety of socially induced factors. Control theories propose that such factors are related to a person's emotional commitment to the normative order based on earlier gratifications achieved in the course of the normative socialization process.…”
Section: Social Control/bonding Theorymentioning
confidence: 99%