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Featured researches published by Michel Born.


Research in Human Development | 2015

Comparing Correlates of Civic Engagement Between Immigrant and Majority Youth in Belgium, Germany, and Turkey

Katharina Eckstein; Philipp Jugert; Peter Noack; Michel Born; Tulin Sener

Drawing on data from a large-scale international project, this research examined predictors of civic engagement between immigrant (n = 599) and majority youth (n = 1,027) in Belgium, Germany, and Turkey. In all three countries immigrants were found to be more civically engaged than their majority peers. Further, based on the assumptions of the civic voluntarism model, civic engagement was predicted by resources, social experiences, and psychological engagement (i.e., internal political efficacy). The results showed that predictors differed by ethnic background. Although internal political efficacy beliefs were only found to be a significant predictor of civic engagement among majority youth, involvement in social networks was found to be a more meaningful predictor among immigrant youth. These results are discussed in terms of theoretical and practical implications.


Human Affairs | 2012

Non-conventional/illegal political participation of male and female youths

Claire Gavray; Bernard Fournier; Michel Born

Belgian data from the PIDOP project show that boys are more involved than girls in illegal political actions, namely the production of graffiti and other acts of “incivility”. These activities must be considered in both groups as complementary to conventional political and social participation and not as their opposite. The main explanatory factor is the level of the perceived efficaciousness of such actions. The lack of trust in institutions and the level of awareness of societal discrimination play no significant explanatory role. In males, the involvement level in these activities depends on feelings of personal discrimination and on the lack of freedom concerning individual choice, confirming the theory of societal vulnerability and Honneth’s theory of recognition. This level also increases along with increasing opportunities to make acquaintances and have fun in the neighbourhood. In females, this involvement is explained by the distance with regard to pro-sociality level.


Archive | 2015

Away from Delinquency and Crime: Resilience and Protective Factors

Fabienne Glowacz; Michel Born

Delinquent and criminal behaviors are often the result of adverse conditions in the family and the neighborhood, or of affiliations with delinquent peers. However, case studies as well as large surveys have shown that even in adverse conditions, many children and adolescents do not engage in delinquency; they are “resilient.” In the explanation of criminal and antisocial behaviors, resilient individuals are those who have succeeded in overcoming at-risk circumstances. Resilience is also regarded as the process through which a person adjusts to at-risk situations in a successful manner. Promotive and protective factors stem from the community, family, school, peers, and individuals, and the configurations of these factors are important. In addition, protective factors are not universal. Risk factors and consequently, protective and resilience processes, may be different for children, adolescents, and adults, as well as for males and females. Finally, it is useful to distinguish primary resilience (i.e., as a preventive force in the onset of delinquency) from secondary resilience, which refers to a return to a crime-free life after a period of serious offending activity.


Encephale-revue De Psychiatrie Clinique Biologique Et Therapeutique | 2014

Étude des propriétés psychométriques de l’échelle CES-D sur un échantillon d’adolescents francophones scolarisés

Aurore Boulard; Jean-Marie Gauthier; Michel Born

UNLABELLED The aim of this paper is to study and validate the French version of the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale developed by Radloff (in 1977) in an adolescent sample. This scale was developed to measure levels of depressive symptomatology, with special emphasis on the affective components and depressed mood. METHOD The data used in this study were collected in 11 schools. Our sample was composed of 1496 French-speaking, Belgian secondary school students aged 12 to 16 years. The questionnaire included demographic information such as age, gender, grade and family composition. The position of the CES-D scale has not changed and was placed in the last part of the self-administered questionnaire. RESULTS After an exploratory factor analysis, we conducted confirmatory factor analysis to test our factor model. We tested the model with four factors proposed by Radloff (in 1977) and also the model proposed by Chabrol (in 2002). Our results indicate a better match with Radloffs model in our sample, showing the relevance of using Radloffs model with four factors in adolescents. Although our analysis shows a clear gender difference with regard to depressive symptoms, the tested factor model remained stable regardless of the gender of the adolescent.


International Journal of Behavioral Development | 2013

Finding the roots of adolescent aggressive behaviour A test of three developmental pathways

Fabienne Glowacz; Marie Hélène Véronneau; Sylvie Boët; Michel Born

Aggressive behaviours in adolescence often originate in early development. This study tested three longitudinal pathways starting in early childhood, in a sample of 325 Belgian participants (162 girls) assessed every 1 or 2 years from birth through age 14. Structural equation models supported the “mother early dissatisfaction” pathway toward adolescent aggression, but neither the “cognitive functioning” nor the “early aggressive behaviour” pathway gained clear support. Mother’s early dissatisfaction with her child was the starting point of a series of negative perceptions of the child, which predicted physical and social aggression in adolescence. Children’s cognitive functioning and early aggression level were weakly correlated with mother’s perceptions. This finding suggests that explaining normative development to parents may improve mothers’ perceptions of their early experience as a mother, of their child, and of their subsequent interactions, which may reduce their child’s future aggressive behaviours.


Archive | 1994

Identification and Interpersonal Maturity: Contribution to a Developmental Approach of Juvenile Delinquency

E. Van Poppel; Michel Born

Following the perspective proposed by Pinatel (1963), and followed up by Selosse (1983) and, more recently, by Le Blanc and Frechette (1987), we thought it was appropriate to distinguish between three levels of interpretation of delinquency: the delinquent act, the delinquent person, and the phenomenon of delinquency. We then have to study the relationships between these three levels.


Journal of Youth Studies | 2017

Political participation beyond borders: a comparative analysis of Turkish youth living in home country, Germany and Belgium

Ayşenur Ataman; Tulin Sener; Peter Noack; Michel Born

ABSTRACT Drawing on data from a large-scale international study [PIDOP – Processes Influencing Democratic Ownership and Participation. 2009–2012. Accessed August 10. http://www.fahs.surrey.ac.uk/pidop/index.htm], the present research examined psychological and demographic factors related to civic and political participation among adolescents and young adults (from 16 to 26 years of age) with a Turkish origin and residing in Belgium (n = 153), Germany (n = 204) and Turkey (n = 253). MANCOVA and one-way ANOVA were employed to address how types of civic, direct and online participation differ by socio-demographic variables. The results indicate that citizenship status was not related with the types of participation, while age, gender and country were significantly related with the type of participation in various degrees. Interaction between all the variables showed that older (20–26), foreign national, male Turkish German sample is significantly more involved in civic participation activities. Results are discussed in light of the naturalization processes of migrant groups abroad and extensive religious involvement of Turkish German sample.


The Journal of Psychology | 2015

If It Helps, I'll Carry On: Factors Supporting the Participation of Native and Immigrant Youth in Belgium and Germany

Michel Born; Daniela Marzana; Sara Alfieri; Claire Gavray

ABSTRACT In this article we propose looking into some factors for Civic Participation and the intention to continue to participate among local (Study I) and immigrant (Study II) young people living in Belgium and Germany. In Study I, 1,079 young people (Mage = 19.23, 44.9% males) completed a self-report questionnaire asking about their Civic Participation. Multiple linear regressions reveal (a) evidence of a pool of variables significantly linked to Civic Participation: Institutional Trust, Collective-Efficacy, Parents’ and Peers’ Support, Political Interest, Motivations and (b) that Civic Participation, along with the mediation of the Participations Efficacy, explains the Intention to Continue to Participate. An explanatory model was constructed on participation and the Intention to Continue to Participate on behalf of the native youth. This model is invariant between the two countries. In Study II, 276 young Turkish immigrants (Mage = 20.80, 49.3% males) recruited in Belgium and Germany filled out the same questionnaire as in Study I. The same analysis was conducted as for Study I, and they provided the same results as the native group, highlighting the invariance of the model between natives and immigrants. Applicative repercussions are discussed.


Psychiatry, Psychology and Law | 2018

Analysis of violent and non violent versatility in self-reported juvenile delinquency

Keren Cuervo; Lidón Villanueva; Michel Born; Claire Gavray

Situational action theory (SAT) has emphasized the interaction between individual and social influences on youth crime involvement. In this study, attitudes towards violence, self-control and perception of neighbourhood are tested in order to determine to what extent they predict versatility in violent and non-violent offences. In order to attain this goal, 2309 Belgian youths aged from 12 to 18 years were administered the Self-report Delinquency Questionnaire. When the offences are divided into violent and non-violent versatilities, the results show differences in the factors that predict delinquency; whereas attitudes towards violence and self-control predict all type of offences, the perception of neighbourhood is only a predictive factor for non-violent offences. External and internal factors need to be included in order to predict the widest range of criminal versatility, since committing a crime involves making choices that depend on the perceived alternatives.


Neuropsychiatrie De L'enfance Et De L'adolescence | 2004

Ces adolescents qui agressent leur mère ! Youth aggressing their mother

Dominique Hélin; V. Chevalier; Michel Born

Violence directed against parents, unrecognized for many years, is a phenomenon today denounced by those individuals who are victims of it. Confronted in our practice by diverse forms of violence, the object of this article is the study of intra-family aggressiveness as a predictor of the capability of the adolescent placed in a Public Institution for the Protection of Youth for the critical analysis of his/her deviant behaviours. The study of a sample of adolescents manifesting violence against their mothers shows us that this form of violence is generally associated with polymorphous delinquency. Besides, these young people regularly come from matrifocal families in which paternal absence and maternal precarity are present. Finally, the observation of our sample reveal that these youth have a lesser capability for self-criticism towards their deviant behaviours.

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