Predictors of Entry into Age-Discordant Relationships Among Adolescent Girls

Abstract

Teenage girls in age-discordant relationships remain of concern for healthy development and well-being. We examine whether factors from several sociological frameworks-self-esteem, deviance, social ecology, family cohesion, and religious involvement-predict entry into such relationships. With longitudinal data on 1,537 adolescent girls, we use structural equation modeling to assess risk and protective factors by age group. Results indicate that few social factors predict entry to such relationships; only religious involvement for the youngest adolescents and self-esteem for middle adolescents predict entry. While adolescent girls who date older males are largely like their peers, any impact of social factors may vary by the developmental stage that adolescent girls occupy. © 2013 Copyright Taylor and Francis Group, LLC.

Publication Title

Deviant Behavior

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