[en] In both gender groups, young people entering the spiral of violence negatively often react against personal insecurity, against a hostile and little promising environment. But those environments still differ between girls and boys according to the sphere which remains the most valorized, 'suitable' for them (public and competitive sphere for the boys, family and emotional sphere for the girls). ISRD data allow to show links between, on one side, the production of not authorized and violent behaviors and, on the other side, gendered concrete life, gendered attitudes and values.
The theory of the societal vulnerability (Walgrave, Vettenburg) and the theory of recognition (Honneth) are confirmed.
Disciplines :
Criminology Sociology & social sciences
Author, co-author :
Gavray, Claire ; Université de Liège - ULiège > Institut des sciences humaines et sociales > Institut des sciences humaines et sociales
Language :
English
Title :
How does gender socialisation influence teenagers' behaviors ? : Contribution of ISRD-2 and ISRD-3 to this question
Publication date :
21 November 2014
Event name :
70th annual meeting of the American Society of Criminology
Event organizer :
ASC
Event place :
San Francisco, United States
Event date :
du 19 au 22 novembre 2014
By request :
Yes
Audience :
International
Commentary :
la récolte de données ISRD Wallonie a été possible grâce à l'appui de l'Université de Liège