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      Children's disruptiveness, peer rejection, friends' deviancy, and delinquent behaviors: a process-oriented approach.

      Development and Psychopathology
      Adolescent, Attention Deficit and Disruptive Behavior Disorders, diagnosis, psychology, Child, Female, Friends, Humans, Juvenile Delinquency, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Models, Psychological, Peer Group, Personality Assessment, Rejection (Psychology), Risk Factors, Social Conformity, Social Identification, Sociometric Techniques, Statistics as Topic, Violence

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          Abstract

          This study examined whether peer rejection and affiliation with deviant friends throughout childhood could mediate the link between early disruptiveness and two aspects of delinquent behaviors (i.e., violence and substance use) in a sample of 375 children. Furthermore, we tested whether the two putative mediators operated in a sequential manner or in a parallel manner. Participants' disruptiveness, peer rejection, and friends' deviancy were assessed throughout childhood (ages 7 to 13). Delinquency-related outcomes were assessed at ages 14 and 15 years. Results indicate that the sequential mediational model was supported when delinquency-related violence was the outcome, but not when substance use was the outcome. The discussion stresses the differential role of peer rejection and affiliation with deviant friends in regard to the two outcomes considered in this study and in regard to the time frame when they were measured.

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