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SELF‐ESTEEM AND DEVIANCE: THE EFFECTS OF RACE AND GENDER *
Author(s) -
COVINGTON JEANETTE
Publication year - 1986
Publication title -
criminology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.467
H-Index - 139
eISSN - 1745-9125
pISSN - 0011-1384
DOI - 10.1111/j.1745-9125.1986.tb00379.x
Subject(s) - deviance (statistics) , psychology , feeling , self esteem , white (mutation) , social psychology , addiction , developmental psychology , psychiatry , biochemistry , statistics , chemistry , mathematics , gene
Provision of occupational and educational opportunities has been the accepted means of reintegrating offenders into society because, with assumption of conventional roles, they are believed to experience improved economic conditions and renewed feelings of respectability. However, given the limited legal options available to them, offender self‐esteem may continue to depend on immersion in deviant subcultures. To examine the effects of subcultural and conventional life‐styles on offender self‐esteem, a sample of 372 heroin addicts in treatment was surveyed. Employment had a positive effect on the self‐esteem of white male addicts only; the self‐evaluations of black male, black female, and white female addicts were unaffected by employment because these users were subjected to less stable working conditions. Subcultural integration had no impact or negative impact on the self‐esteem of black male, black female, and white female addicts while subcultural involvement was associated with higher self‐esteem in white males. The fact that white male addicts experienced favorable self‐evaluations with involvement in both conventional and deviant life‐styles is inconsistent with research which suggests an antagonism between crime and work: rather, these data seem to indicate that the join pursuit of legal and illegal professions may be more common.

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