Crime in the Kingdom: The Effects of Low Self-Control in a Saudi Arabian Sample of Youth

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Abstract

Low self-control has emerged as a ubiquitous predictor of a range of behaviors and life outcomes, including criminal and analogous behaviors. Evidence linking self-control to criminal conduct, moreover, has also emerged from several cross-cultural studies. While important, cross-cultural studies remain limited in number and in scope. Extending empirical investigations into the effects of self-control cross-culturally, we present findings from data collected from Saudi Arabian high school youth. Low self-control was a substantive predictor of self-reported delinquency, violent behavior (VB), victimization, and delinquent peer associations for males and females. The effects of low self-control were found to be substantive, general, and invariant across sex within a culture that practices sex segregation and one that embraces harsh punishments for violent conduct.

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Sacarellos, C. D., Wright, J. P., Almosaed, N. F., Moghrabi, S. S., Bashatah, F. S., & Morgan, M. A. (2016). Crime in the Kingdom: The Effects of Low Self-Control in a Saudi Arabian Sample of Youth. Youth Violence and Juvenile Justice, 14(3), 291–312. https://doi.org/10.1177/1541204015616663

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