General Strain Theory and Social Support: A Study of African Americans

Agnews (1992) general strain theory (GST) has gained increasing attention and empirical support for the effects of strain on negative emotions and deviant coping. However, previous research provides inconsistent results about (1) the effects of negative emotions on deviant coping, (2) the significan...

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Main Author: Lyons, Jason Alan
Other Authors: Bill Bankston
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: LSU 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-0709102-115258/
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spelling ndltd-LSU-oai-etd.lsu.edu-etd-0709102-1152582013-01-07T22:48:00Z General Strain Theory and Social Support: A Study of African Americans Lyons, Jason Alan Sociology Agnews (1992) general strain theory (GST) has gained increasing attention and empirical support for the effects of strain on negative emotions and deviant coping. However, previous research provides inconsistent results about (1) the effects of negative emotions on deviant coping, (2) the significance of social support in GST, and (3) gender differences and GST. This paper addresses these issues by testing hypotheses generated from GST and analyzing data collected from a nationally representative sample of African American adults. Results from ordinary least squares regression analyses generally support the hypotheses. First, the effects of strain on deviant coping are fully mediated by negative emotions. In addition, the same-directed effects of negative emotions on deviance (outer-directed negative emotions on outer-directed deviance) are larger than opposite-directed effects (inner-directed negative emotions on outer-directed deviance) as hypothesized. Second, social support was found to have significant direct effects on both negative emotions and deviant coping, while buffering effects of social support on strain and negative emotions as well as negative emotions and deviance were not observed. Finally, this study found no gender differences in emotional reactions to strain and the buffering effects of social support. Implications of these findings are discussed as well as the future development of GST. Bill Bankston Sung Joon Jang Yoshinori Kamo LSU 2002-07-09 text application/pdf http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-0709102-115258/ http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-0709102-115258/ en unrestricted I hereby grant to LSU or its agents the right to archive and to make available my thesis or dissertation in whole or in part in the University Libraries in all forms of media, now or hereafter known. I retain all proprietary rights, such as patent rights. I also retain the right to use in future works (such as articles or books) all or part of this thesis or dissertation.
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Sociology
spellingShingle Sociology
Lyons, Jason Alan
General Strain Theory and Social Support: A Study of African Americans
description Agnews (1992) general strain theory (GST) has gained increasing attention and empirical support for the effects of strain on negative emotions and deviant coping. However, previous research provides inconsistent results about (1) the effects of negative emotions on deviant coping, (2) the significance of social support in GST, and (3) gender differences and GST. This paper addresses these issues by testing hypotheses generated from GST and analyzing data collected from a nationally representative sample of African American adults. Results from ordinary least squares regression analyses generally support the hypotheses. First, the effects of strain on deviant coping are fully mediated by negative emotions. In addition, the same-directed effects of negative emotions on deviance (outer-directed negative emotions on outer-directed deviance) are larger than opposite-directed effects (inner-directed negative emotions on outer-directed deviance) as hypothesized. Second, social support was found to have significant direct effects on both negative emotions and deviant coping, while buffering effects of social support on strain and negative emotions as well as negative emotions and deviance were not observed. Finally, this study found no gender differences in emotional reactions to strain and the buffering effects of social support. Implications of these findings are discussed as well as the future development of GST.
author2 Bill Bankston
author_facet Bill Bankston
Lyons, Jason Alan
author Lyons, Jason Alan
author_sort Lyons, Jason Alan
title General Strain Theory and Social Support: A Study of African Americans
title_short General Strain Theory and Social Support: A Study of African Americans
title_full General Strain Theory and Social Support: A Study of African Americans
title_fullStr General Strain Theory and Social Support: A Study of African Americans
title_full_unstemmed General Strain Theory and Social Support: A Study of African Americans
title_sort general strain theory and social support: a study of african americans
publisher LSU
publishDate 2002
url http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-0709102-115258/
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