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Guardians to Counter Adolescent Drug Use? Limitations of a Routine Activities Approach
Christopher Bratt, Ph.D.*
Centre for Child and Adolescent Mental Health
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: christopher.bratt{at}r-bup.no.
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Abstract |
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Based on suggestions made by routine activities theory and data from two surveys, the present study discusses the use of adult guardians as a means to counter drug use among adolescents who seek out unsupervised routine activities with peers. Two surveys with 13- to 15-year-olds were conducted 4 years apart in a Norwegian town (Ns = 1,455 and 1,552). Prior to the second survey, adult guardians (social workers and voluntary guardians) were introduced at places where teenagers tended to gather. The town experienced a remarkable reduction in adolescents use of alcohol and illegal drugs, in contrast to the general development in Norway. Routine activities theory would suggest that the introduction of guardians contributed to this development. Data did not support this suggestion. However, data indicated that guardians might result in a marginalization of users of illegal drugs. This article uses the example of drug use to point at limitations in a situational approach to counter youth delinquency.
First published on December 13, 2007, doi:10.1177/0044118X07308071
Youth & Society 2008;39:385.
A more recent version of this article appeared on March 1, 2008

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