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Journal Article

Citation

Kipke MD, Unger JB, O'Connor S, Palmer RF, LaFrance SR. Adolescence 1997; 32(127): 655-669.

Affiliation

Division of Adolescent Medicine, Childrens Hospital Los Angeles, CA 90054-0700, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1997, Libra Publishers)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

9360739

Abstract

This study characterizes subcultural differences within an inner-city street youth population. Variations in residential status, subsistence patterns, and service utilization according to peer group affiliation were explored. A brief structured interview was administered to 752 youth, ages 12 to 23 years, who had been living on the streets for two or more consecutive months, or who were fully integrated into the "street economy." Subjects were recruited for the study using a stratified probability sampling design, with 30% recruited from community-based service sites and 70% from street locations and at natural "hang-outs." Five street youth groups were identified: "punks/skinheads," "druggies," "hustlers," "gang members," and "loners." The results demonstrated unique patterns with respect to places stayed/slept, means of financial support and economic subsistence, and use of available services according to peer group affiliation. The implications of these findings and recommendations for future research and service provision are discussed.


Language: en

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