Agency, Self-Efficacy, and Desistance from Crime: an Application of Social Cognitive Theory
Deviance
Sense of Agency
Self-Efficacy
Social Cognitive Theory
DOI:
10.1007/s40865-018-0101-1
Publication Date:
2019-01-04T05:39:35Z
AUTHORS (3)
ABSTRACT
To explain why many offenders desist from crime, and why some persist, some theorists highlight the role of personal agency. Qualitative studies, in particular, observe that desisting offenders tend to express a “language of agency”—they view themselves as capable of influencing their actions and environment—while persistent offenders tend to see themselves as relatively helpless and even “doomed to deviance.” Drawing on Bandura’s social cognitive theory, which highlights self-efficacy as a key mechanism of agency, we analyze quantitative data from a large sample of serious offenders and examine how confidence in their ability to desist (desistance self-efficacy) is related to offending behavior. To advance research in this area, we focus on within-person effects and examine how changes in desistance self-efficacy relate to changes in offending over time. We also examine factors that are expected to enable or constrain personal agency. The findings indicate that a number of factors contribute to changes in desistance self-efficacy. An increase in desistance self-efficacy, in turn, is associated with a decrease in overall criminal involvement. Implications for theory, research, and policy are discussed.
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