Uggen, Christopher. 2000. “Class, Gender, and Arrest: An
Intergenerational Analysis of Workplace Power and Control.” Criminology 38:101-28.
ABSTRACT
Power-control
theory posits that parental workplace positions affect adolescent law
violation. To date, however, no test of the theory has directly measured
occupational power and control. This paper tests whether parental and
adolescent workplace freedom and control affect criminal behavior and arrest as
the theory predicts, using data from a prospective longitudinal survey of 1000
adolescents and their parents. The results suggest sex differentials in the
effects of maternal authority position and parental freedom and control. In
particular, daughters whose mothers hold authority positions are more likely to
be arrested than are daughters whose mothers do not hold such positions. The
effects of adolescent employment also differ by sex, with perceived workplace
power and control reducing rates of arrest among females but increasing them
among males.