The Geography of Normative Climates: An Application to Adolescent Substance Use.

J Youth Adolesc

Department of Sociology, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, 711 Oldfather Hall, Lincoln, NE, 68588-0324, USA.

Published: August 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • The existing research underlines the significant impact of peers on adolescent substance use but overlooks the influence of broader school and geographic contexts.
  • The study utilizes data from the Nebraska Risk and Protective Factor Student Survey to analyze how geographic settings affect school-level normative climates regarding substance use.
  • Findings reveal that both the permissiveness and consistency of these climates are influenced by geographic context, affecting adolescent substance use behaviors differently for alcohol and marijuana.

Article Abstract

The existing research on risk factors for adolescent substance use highlights the importance of peers' direct influence on risky behaviors, yet two key limitations persist. First, there is considerably less attention to the ways in which peers shape overall (e.g., school-level) normative climates of attitudes and expectations about substance use, and, second, the role of the broader geographic contexts in which these climates are embedded is essentially neglected. In light of shifting trends in geographic differences in adolescent substance use, the current study uses data from the 2007 Nebraska Risk and Protective Factor Student Survey (n = 26,647; 80 % non-Hispanic White; 51 % female) to (a) explore whether geographic context shapes the character (permissiveness) and consistency (homogeneity) of normative climates and (b) examine the consequences (effects) of such climates on adolescent substance use risk across the rural-urban continuum. Normative climates are a consistent predictor of substance use, yet the geographic context in which schools are located matters for both the nature and influence of these climates, and the patterns differ between normative climates about alcohol and marijuana. These findings illustrate that school normative climates do indeed matter for substance use behavior, and the ways in which they do depend on their broader, geographic context. Thus, future research on youth's substance use should be attuned to these more nuanced distinctions.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10964-016-0444-zDOI Listing

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