International Journal of Conflict and Violence (Dec 2011)

Eastern European Transformation and Youth Attitudes toward Violence

  • Berit Haußmann,
  • Eva Maria Groß

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 2
pp. 304 – 324

Abstract

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<span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman'; font-size: small;"><div><div>This cross-national examination of the motives behind adolescent approval of violence in major cities in Germany and four Eastern European transformation&nbsp;societies (Czech Republic, Poland, Russia, Slovenia) draws on Institutional Anomie Theory (IAT), which leads us to expect higher instrumental motivation for violence&nbsp;among adolescents in the transforming societies. Differences in institutional structure and cultural orientations between Germany and the Eastern European&nbsp;societies are assessed using data from ILO and ESS. Analysis of the different motives for violence is based on data collected by the Criminological&nbsp;Research Institute of Lower Saxony (KFN) in Krak&oacute;w, Volgograd, Ljubljana, Plzen, and Hamburg. Comparability and cross-cultural interpretability of the violence</div><div>attitude measure is assessed by applying confirmatory factor analyses in multi-group comparisons. A lack of sufficient data meant that specific assumed linkages&nbsp;as implied by IAT could not be established, but the results for a specific instrumental/utilitarian motive for violence and for institutional structure and&nbsp;cultural orientations point to the utility of applying insights from IAT to understanding the dynamics of violence within the Eastern European context of transformation.</div><div>We find empirical indications that specific features of the family mediate the &ldquo;Eastern effect&rdquo; on the instrumental/utilitarian motive. Further research&nbsp;is needed to discover whether economic dominance affects motives for youth violence indirectly via the socialization provided by non-economic&nbsp;institutions rather than directly via cultural orientations.</div></div></span>

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