TY - JOUR AU1 - Burkett, Steven R. AU2 - Jensen, Eric L. AB - This study examines the relationship between a belief in the certainty of apprehension and self-reported marijuana use; the relative importance of this belief and ties to conventional others as sources of control; and the extent to which involvement with other users is related to the belief examined and use. The findings suggest that both the belief examined and conventional ties, in this case to the family and school, serve as independent sources of control among the high school youth studied. Of particular importance is involvement with other users; use is unlikely given the absence of group supports. This holds both for youth who maintain conventional ties and for those with weak ties. Further, involvement with nonusing peers is related to patterns of use as well as the belief that one will get caught should he try. The effectiveness of the law as a deterrent, then, is questionable given peer involvement and reinforcement for beliefs which effectively discount or support the certainty of apprehension as a viable reason for nonuse. TI - Conventional Ties, Peer Influence, and the Fear of Apprehension: a Study of Adolescent Marijuana Use JF - The Sociological Quarterly DO - 10.1111/j.1533-8525.1975.tb00966.x DA - 1975-09-01 UR - https://www.deepdyve.com/lp/taylor-francis/conventional-ties-peer-influence-and-the-fear-of-apprehension-a-study-vS8m40fuE4 SP - 522 EP - 533 VL - 16 IS - 4 DP - DeepDyve ER -