Research suggests that lay people invoke a multiplicity of causes to explai
n crime and juvenile offending. The extent to which the different explanati
ons are endorsed appears to be partly a function of demographic characteris
tics. Abrams, Simpson, and Hogg (1987) suggested that those who are in psyc
hological proximity to delinquency are more likely to invoke situational ty
pe explanations for juvenile offending rather than dispositional ones. This
study tests this proximity hypothesis and provides information on Australi
an adolescents' explanations of juvenile delinquency. A total of 3,171 seco
ndary school pupils from 25 state high schools in New South Wales rated 39
explanations for juvenile offending on a Likert scale. Principal component
analysis and a varimax rotation of the responses identified six factors: ho
me environment, emotional adjustment, social control, impulsivity, innate,
and social alienation. Analysis of the scores on these factors showed that
there was some support for the proximity hypothesis.