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Adolescent Place Attachment, Social Capital, and Perceived Safety: A Comparison of 13 Countries
Authors:Lorenza Dallago  Douglas D Perkins  Massimo Santinello  Will Boyce  Michal Molcho  Antony Morgan
Institution:1. University of Padova, Padua, Italy
2. Via S. Vito 33, 38023, Cles (TN), Italy
3. Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, USA
4. Queen’s University, Kingston, ON, Canada
5. National University of Ireland, Galaway, Ireland
6. National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE), London, UK
Abstract:In adolescence, children become increasingly independent and autonomous, and spend more time in neighborhood settings away from home. During mid-to-late adolescence, youth often become more critical about the place they live. Their attachment to home and even community may decrease as they explore and develop new attachments to other specific places. The aim of this study is to understand how 15-year-old students from 13 countries perceive their local neighborhood area (place attachment, social capital and safety), and how these different community cognitions are interrelated. We hypothesize that their place attachment predicts safety, and that the relationship is mediated in part by social capital. Result show that, despite cross-cultural differences in neighborhood perceptions, the proposed theoretical model fits robustly across all 13 countries.
Keywords:Place perceptions  Trust  Neighboring  Fear  Comparative  International  Health Behaviour in School-aged Children  HBSC  Belgium  Germany  Estonia  Hungary  Latvia  Denmark  Finland  Norway  Sweden  United Kingdom  Italy  Macedonia  Israel
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