Life Course and Network Advantage: Peak Periods, Turning Points, and Transition Ages

Author(s):  
Ronald S. Burt
Author(s):  
Krzysztof Pękala ◽  
Andrzej Kacprzak ◽  
Piotr Chomczyński ◽  
Jakub Ratajczak ◽  
Michał Marczak ◽  
...  

Both juvenile and adult criminal careers show regularities in the origins of delinquency, the dynamics of the criminal pathway, and the turning points that lead to desistance/persistence in crime. Research shows that family, education, and friendship environments contribute significantly to the individual choices that create criminal biographies. Our aim was to apply core aspects of life course theory (LCT): trajectory, the aged-graded process, transitions, institutions, and ultimately how desistance/persistence factor into explaining the criminal careers of Polish offenders. The research is based on in-depth interviews (130) carried out with both offenders (90) and experts (40). The offenders were divided into two groups: 30 were juveniles, and 60 were adults of whom half were sentenced for the first time (30) and half were recidivists (30) located in correctional institutions or released. The experts group (40) includes psychologists, educators, social rehabilitators, and prison and juvenile detention personnel working with offenders. We used triangulation of researcher, data, and methodology. Our data revealed that similar biographical experiences characterized by an early socialization, family and friends-based circles laid the groundwork for their entry and continued participation in criminal activity. Juvenile and adult first-time sentenced offenders led criminal careers significantly different from those of recidivists, who faced problems with social adaptation caused by lack of family and institutional support.


2018 ◽  
Vol 82 (1) ◽  
pp. 51-74 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alice Goffman

Reviving classical attention to gathering times as sites of transformation and building on more recent microsociological work, this paper uses qualitative data to show how social occasions open up unexpected bursts of change in the lives of those attending. They do this by pulling people into a special realm apart from normal life, generating collective effervescence and emotional energy, bringing usually disparate people together, forcing public rankings, and requiring complex choreography, all of which combine to make occasions sites of inspiration and connection as well as sites of offense and violation. Rather than a time out from “real” life, social occasions hold an outsized potential to unexpectedly shift the course that real life takes. Implications for microsociology, social inequality, and the life course are considered.


1999 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
pp. 52
Author(s):  
Jeylan T. Mortimer ◽  
Ian H. Gotlib ◽  
Blair Wheaton

2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. S437-S437
Author(s):  
Dawn C Carr ◽  
Ben L Kail ◽  
Rocio Calvo

Abstract According to many social gerontologist and life course scholars, major life course transitions, referred to as “turning points,” have a significant impact on well-being. Although the relationship between major later life turning points and general well-being is fairly well understood, it is unclear whether there is systematic racial/ethnic variation in response to turning points in general. Moreover, much of sparse research on racial/ethnic variation that does exits overlooks how Hispanic Americans may respond differently to turning points than do either white Americans or African Americans. To that end, in this paper, we draw on life course theory to assess whether the relationship between retirement and the death of a spouse (i.e. turning points) and life satisfaction (a measure of well-being) vary by race/ethnicity. We focus on differences between whites, Hispanics, and African Americans. Moreover, we draw on stress process theory to identify mechanisms that may explain any observed racial/ethnic variation in these relationships. Using the Health and Retirement Study, in preliminary results we find: 1) before adjusting for turning points, Hispanics appear to have higher life satisfaction than whites, and African Americans do not differ significantly from whites; 2) however, after adjusting for turning points, only Hispanics who make life course transitions have significantly higher life satisfaction than whites; and 3) this higher life satisfaction observed among Hispanics who experience turning points is largely not accounted for by several factors derived from stress process theory.


2020 ◽  
pp. 251-262
Author(s):  
John H. Laub ◽  
Robert J. Sampson

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