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According to the neighborhood effects hypothesis, there is a negative relation between neighborhood wealth and youth's problem behavior. It is often assumed that there are more problems in deprived neighborhoods, but there are also reports of higher rates of behavioral problems in more affluent neighborhoods. Much of this literature does not take into account relative wealth. Our central question was whether the economic position of adolescents' families, relative to the neighborhood in which they lived, was related to adolescents' internalizing and externalizing problem behavior. We used longitudinal data for youth between 12-16 and 16-20 years of age, combined with population register data (N = 926; 55% females). We employ between-within models to account for time-invariant confounders, including parental background characteristics. Our findings show that, for adolescents, moving to a more affluent neighborhood was related to increased levels of depression, social phobia, aggression, and conflict with fathers and mothers. This could be indirect evidence for the relative deprivation mechanism, but we could not confirm this, and we did not find any gender differences. The results do suggest that future research should further investigate the role of individuals' relative position in their neighborhood in order not to overgeneralize neighborhood effects and to find out for whom neighborhoods matter.

Original publication

DOI

10.1007/s10964-017-0668-6

Type

Journal article

Journal

J Youth Adolesc

Publication Date

09/2017

Volume

46

Pages

1891 - 1904

Keywords

Externalizing problems, Internalizing problems, Neighborhood effects, Parent–adolescent conflict, Relative deprivation, Residential mobility, Adolescent, Aggression, Depression, Female, Humans, Male, Poverty Areas, Problem Behavior, Psychology, Adolescent, Residence Characteristics, Social Conformity, Young Adult