TY - JOUR PY - 1996// TI - Risk Preferences and Patriarchy: Extending Power-Control Theory JO - Social forces A1 - Grasmick, Harold G. A1 - Hagan, John A1 - Blackwell, Brenda Sims A1 - Arneklev, BJ SP - 177 EP - 199 VL - 75 IS - 1 N2 - Power-control theory, at its most abstract level, links gender differences in risk preference to patriarchal family structures. In previous studies, direct tests have focused on adolescent delinquency, which is a specific form of risk-taking, and have used measures of risk preference specific to delinquency. In the present article, we introduce evidence for more general power-control theory hypotheses by employing a more global measure of risk preference and analyzing data from a sample of adults. We have found that among adults who were raised in more patriarchal families, females have a significantly lower taste for risk, globally defined, than males, and that such a gender difference does not appear among adults who were raised in less patriarchal families. The findings provide a basis for expanding the scope of power-control theory beyond adolescent delinquency to include the gender patterning, and changes over time in that patterning, of a wide range of risk-taking behaviors among adults, including risks that are socially and culturally valued.

LA - SN - 0037-7732 UR - http://dx.doi.org/ ID - ref1 ER -