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Dive into the research topics where Jonathan Intravia is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Jonathan Intravia.


International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology | 2012

The Roles of Social Bonds, Personality, and Perceived Costs: An Empirical Investigation Into Hirschi’s “New” Control Theory

Jonathan Intravia; Shayne Jones; Alex R. Piquero

Hirschi’s reconceptualized control theory suggests that social bonds serve as the primary inhibitors to delinquency and that personality-based self-control (PBSC) is not relevant. He also indicates that the number of inhibitors, multiplied by their salience, influences the perceived costs of delinquency. These claims have not been widely tested. Using a large, school-based sample of adolescents, the authors test Hirschi’s reconceptualization and find that certain inhibitors (e.g., parental monitoring) are more important than others (e.g., maternal attachment). There are also unique types of costs (e.g., parental costs, peer costs) with differential impacts. Salience exerts a main effect, but there was little evidence to suggest it interacts with costs. Finally, PBSC has the strongest effect. These findings not only offer support for some of Hirschi’s claims but also provide directions to better formulate a more comprehensive and empirically supported control theory.


Criminology | 2016

CYNICAL STREETS: NEIGHBORHOOD SOCIAL PROCESSES AND PERCEPTIONS OF CRIMINAL INJUSTICE*

Mark T. Berg; Eric A. Stewart; Jonathan Intravia; Patricia Y. Warren; Ronald L. Simons

Studies have found that African Americans are more likely to perceive racial biases in the criminal justice system than are those from other racial groups. There is a limited understanding of how neighborhood social processes affect variation in these perceptions. This study formulates a series of hypotheses focused on whether perceived racial biases in the criminal justice system or perceptions of injustice vary as a function of levels of moral and legal cynicism as well as of adverse police–citizen encounters. These hypotheses are tested with multilevel regression models applied to data from a sample of 689 African Americans located in 39 neighborhoods. Findings from the regression models indicate that the positive association between structural disadvantage and perceptions of injustice is accounted for by moral and legal cynicism. Furthermore, adverse police encounters significantly increase perceptions of injustice; controlling for these encounters reduces the strength of the association between cynicism and injustice perceptions. Finally, the findings reveal that cynicism intensifies the association between adverse police encounters and perceptions of criminal injustice. The results are discussed in terms of their implications for research regarding perceived biases in the criminal justice system and neighborhood social processes.


Journal of Criminal Justice | 2014

Neighborhood-level differences in police discrimination and subcultural violence: a multilevel examination of adopting the code of the street

Jonathan Intravia; Kevin T. Wolff; Eric A. Stewart; Ronald L. Simons

Although evidence of Elijah Andersons (1999) code of the street thesis has received a great amount of attention, researchers have rarely investigated the intricate process in which individuals adopt the street code. Using two waves of data from 763 African American adolescents, the current study examined (1) whether individuals who have experienced racial discrimination from police are more likely to adopt the street code, and (2) whether this relationship is more robust across different neighborhood-level factors. Using multilevel modeling techniques, our results offer support for Andersons arguments. Specifically, we found that perception of police discrimination is significantly related to adopting the street code. In addition, this relationship was conditioned by neighborhood-level violence. Findings from the current research are discussed, along with implications for future research in this area.


Deviant Behavior | 2018

The Racial Divide Surrounding United States of America National Anthem Protests in the National Football League

Jonathan Intravia; Alex R. Piquero; Nicole Leeper Piquero

ABSTRACT Issues related to race have long been of interest to social scientists. One such issue that has received near daily attention throughout the Fall of 2017 concerns the protests undertaken by National Football League (NFL) players regarding the national anthem. Although there has been some descriptive work on citizen views about anthem protests, there has been no empirical work examining the correlates of different types of anthem protests and subsequent reactions by the NFL and team owners to those protests. Using data obtained from a sample of young adults, we find that Black respondents were more likely to support all types of anthem protests and also to believe that players who protest the anthem should not be disciplined by the NFL nor team owners. Moreover, these strong race effects remain even after controlling for several key correlates, which themselves point to some key distinctions regarding how young adults view the anthem protests.


Youth Violence and Juvenile Justice | 2017

Community Disadvantage, Prosocial Bonds, and Juvenile Reoffending A Multilevel Mediation Analysis

Jonathan Intravia; Emily Pelletier; Kevin T. Wolff; Michael T. Baglivio

Prior efforts suggest that adverse community contexts have the ability to impact juvenile recidivism. However, far less research has examined the indirect effects of community disadvantage on delinquent youth reoffending. As a result, it remains unclear whether several theoretically relevant mechanisms mediate the effects of disadvantage on continued delinquent behavior. Drawing from theoretical models of contextual effects, as well as social control theory, the present study examines whether prosocial bonds are salient mechanisms in the context–recidivism relationship. Using a sample of over 20,000 juvenile offenders, our results indicate that both prosocial relationships and prosocial activities partially mediate the effect of community disadvantage on youth reoffending. Findings from the current study are discussed, along with policy implications and directions for future research in this area.


Youth Violence and Juvenile Justice | 2017

What Can Help? Examining Levels of Substance (Non)use as a Protective Factor in the Effect of ACEs on Crime:

Jessica M. Craig; Jonathan Intravia; Kevin T. Wolff; Michael T. Baglivio

Although the deleterious impact of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) on offending has been established, less is known about the possible protective factors that may buffer this relationship. Using a sample of over 28,000 adjudicated delinquents from a large southern state, the current study investigated the role of substance (non)use on the relationship between ACEs and recidivism and whether these results differed by race/ethnicity and sex. Results illustrate that ACEs increase the likelihood of recidivism among youth who engaged in moderate-to-high substance use. However, this effect was not found among youth who reported little-to-no substance use. Furthermore, these effects were largely consistent across race/ethnicity and sex. Policy implications of this buffering effect are discussed as well as limitations and directions for future research.


Deviant Behavior | 2017

Violent Attitudes and Antisocial Behavior: Examining the Code of the Street’s Generalizability among a College Sample

Jonathan Intravia; Kevin T. Wolff; Benjamin R. Gibbs; Alex R. Piquero

ABSTRACT Drawing on Elijah Anderson’s (1999) Code of the Street thesis, this study assesses the generalizability of street code attitudes. Using a sample of college students from a large Midwest university, the current study contributes to the literature by examining: (1) the generalizability of street code attitudes; (2) the correlates of street code attitudes, including various forms of strain; and (3) the predictive power of street code attitudes on criminal and non-criminal behavior. Our results reveal that street code attitudes are generalizable to college students, strain constructs are important correlates of street code attitudes, and street code attitudes are associated with criminal behavior. However, the effect of street code attitudes on criminal behavior becomes non-significant once measures of strain are included. Further, street code attitudes do not predict non-criminal behavior.


Deviant Behavior | 2018

Investigating the Effects of Media Consumption on Attitudes Toward Police Legitimacy

Jonathan Intravia; Kevin T. Wolff; Alex R. Piquero

ABSTRACT Prior investigations have examined both traditional media (e.g., television news) and entertainment media (e.g., crime-related shows) on policing-related outcomes; however, less is known how contemporary forms of media, such as the Internet and social media, may affect policing-related outcomes. Using a sample of young adults, the current study examines the effect of multiple types of media consumption (traditional, entertainment, the Internet, and social media) on attitudes toward police legitimacy. Findings reveal that respondents who read news online are more likely to have negative attitudes toward police legitimacy. However, when individual differences are controlled for, the effect of reading news online is weakened and using social media becomes marginally significant. Further, the impact of media consumption on attitudes toward police legitimacy varies by key audience characteristics.


Crime & Delinquency | 2018

The Protective Impact of Immigrant Concentration on Juvenile Recidivism: A Multilevel Examination of Potential Mechanisms:

Kevin T. Wolff; Jonathan Intravia; Michael T. Baglivio; Alex R. Piquero

Both macro- and micro-level research suggests that immigration is unrelated or negatively associated with crime and violence. However, far less research has examined the indirect effects of immigrant concentration on individual-level criminal behavior, and specifically with respect to persistent offending. Moreover, researchers have only begun to explore the mechanisms that link neighborhood context, such as immigrant concentration, to individual outcomes. Thus, identification of the potential mechanisms that may mediate the effect of immigrant concentration on offending remains little understood. Using a unique sample of more than 26,000 youthful offenders from the state of Florida, multilevel structural equation modeling (MSEM) analyses reveal that family structure, familial incarceration, and social ties partially mediate the effect of immigrant concentration on youth reoffending. Findings and implications from the present study are discussed, along with policy implications and future directions for research in this area.


Journal of Youth and Adolescence | 2018

The effects of neighborhood context on exposure to adverse childhood experiences (ACE) among adolescents involved in the juvenile justice system: latent classes and contextual effects

Kevin T. Wolff; Celina Cuevas; Jonathan Intravia; Michael T. Baglivio; Nathan Epps

Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) have been identified as a key risk factor associated with a wide range of negative life outcomes, including juvenile delinquency. Much less work has explored whether certain combinations of ACEs, or typologies of trauma, exist, and whether or not these subgroups are differentially associated with certain youth-level and/or community-level characteristics. The current study uses latent class analysis to examine ACE typologies among a sample of over 92,000 juvenile offenders between the ages of 10 and 18 in the state of Florida (52% male, 37.3% White, 46.8% Black, 15.9% Hispanic). Multilevel multinomial logistic regression is used to assess the relationship between both individual- and community-level factors and class membership. The findings suggest that a total of five distinct ACE typologies exist among the sample of juvenile offenders, and age, race, and sex were significantly associated with class membership. Additionally, controlling for individual-level characteristics, community-level measures of immigrant concentration, residential instability, and two separate measures of concentrated disadvantage and affluence were significantly related to class membership. This study contributes to the understanding of adverse childhood experiences, and adds to existing knowledge regarding the relationship between contextual factors and childhood abuse, maltreatment, and trauma. The identification of ACE subgroups with distinct characteristics may help guide prevention strategies and tailor treatment provided by the juvenile justice system.

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Kevin T. Wolff

John Jay College of Criminal Justice

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Alex R. Piquero

University of Texas at Dallas

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Nicole Leeper Piquero

University of Texas at Dallas

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Shayne Jones

University of South Florida

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Allison Bernheimer

John Jay College of Criminal Justice

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Celina Cuevas

John Jay College of Criminal Justice

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