The impact of Hurricane Andrew on deviant behavior among a multi-racial/ethnic sample of adolescents in Dade County, Florida: a longitudinal analysis

Abstract

Findings from a longitudinal study are presented on the relationships between the problems and stresses resulting from Hurricane Andrew and posthurricane minor deviant behavior. The sample (N = 4,978) included Hispanic, African-American, and White non-Hispanic middle school students enrolled in Dade County, Florida public schools. Two waves of data were collected prior to the hurricane; a third was obtained approximately 6 months following the storm. Results indicated that females were likely to report higher levels of hurricane-related stress symptoms than males. After controlling for prehurricane levels of minor deviance, family support, and race/ethnicity, hurricane stress symptom level remained a significant predictor of posthurricane minor deviant behavior. The findings lend support to stress theories of social deviance.

Reference: 
Khoury EL1, Warheit GJ, Hargrove MC, Zimmerman RS, Vega WA, Gil AG | 1997
In: Journal of traumatic stress, ISSN 0894-9867 | 10 | 1 | Jan | 71-91
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/jts.2490100107/abstract
Placement code: 
Yzermans collectie