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Showing papers by "Francis T. Cullen published in 1979"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article found that having masculine attributes positively affected the commission of different types of delinquent offenses. But, despite the ubiquity with which this "masculinity hypothesis" appears, it has received few empirical assessments, and those that do exist typically are flawed by what amounts to the ecological fallacy.
Abstract: With increasing frequency, commentators assert that attitudes associated with occupying the male status or “masculinity” contribute to criminal/delinquent involvement. Despite the ubiquity with which this “masculinity hypothesis” appears, it has received few empirical assessments, and those that do exist typically are flawed by what amounts to the ecological fallacy. Using individual level data, this research attempted to test the masculinity proposition. In general, our data lent some support to the hypothesis, indicating that independent of gender, having masculine attributes positively affected the commission of different types of delinquent offenses.

43 citations