This volume brings together a sample of the best of the studies that
illustrate two recent trends in research on deviant behavior. The first
of these trends is the investigation of deviant behavior in longitudinal
perspective. Panels of subjects are followed over long periods of time
to establish temporal relationships be- tween deviant behavior and the
antecedents and consequences of deviant behav- ior. The second trend in
contemporary research on deviance is the recognition of the association
among forms of deviant behavior such as violence, drug abuse, and theft.
The recognition of the covariation among forms of deviance stimulated
questions regarding the nature of the relationships among multiple forms
of de- viance. Is one form of deviant behavior a cause or a consequence
of other forms of deviant behavior? What variables mediate and moderate
such causal relation- ships? Do different forms of deviant behavior have
common antecedents and consequences? Independent of the foregoing
relationships, do particular forms of deviant behavior have unique
antecedents and consequences? The eight original research studies that,
along with the introduction and overview, constitute this volume are
based on data drawn from among the most influential longitudinal studies
in the general area of deviant behavior. These studies variously
consider common and pattern-specific antecedents and conse- quences,
reciprocal influences, and intervening and moderating variables in
causal relationships among drug use, crime, and other forms of deviance.