Abstract

 


 



Gender and Motivations for Street Racing in Malaysia


Abu Sadat Nurullah


University of Alberta - Department of Sociology

Pute R. Makol-Abdul


International Islamic University of Malaysia (IIUM)

Saodah A. Rahman


International Islamic University of Malaysia (IIUM)

June 5, 2012

Journal of Sociological Research, Vol. 3, No. 1, pp. 67-79, 2012

Abstract:     
The purpose of this study was to identify social, economic, and psychological factors in street racing in Malaysia. The study also assessed gender differences in terms of the causes of participation in street racing, and the street racers’ personality in terms of spiritual well-being, self-efficacy, and self-esteem. A snowball sample of 122 street racers (males, n=99, Mean age=21.52, SD=4.25; females, n=23, Mean age=19.22, SD=2.47) responded to self-tailored questionnaires and existing scales. For female racers, ‘family violence,’ ‘parental conflict,’ and ‘parenting style’ were the major familial factors leading to street racing. In case of male racers, ‘parenting style’ and ‘relationship with family members’ were the main causes of street racing. A sizeable percentage of male racers and female racers identified ‘social contact with the street racers,’ ‘learned attitudes which encourage street racing,’ ‘mass media and peer influences’ as causes of street racing. Both groups of respondents cited ‘social pressure,’ ‘social labeling,’ ‘social isolation,’ ‘opportunities for joining street racing,’ ‘limited surveillance of authority,’ and ‘limited recreational and sports facilities’ as reasons for involvement in street racing. In terms of psychological factors, considerable percentage of male racers and female racers reported ‘self-image,’ ‘desire for recognition and attention,’ ‘escape from social-psychological stress,’ and ‘self-actualization’ as important factors leading to street racing. Unemployment was found to be one important reason for street racing almost equally by both the groups. Significant differences in mean spiritual well-being and self-efficacy scores of male racers and female racers did not exist. However, male racers obtained significantly higher mean self-esteem score than female racers.

Number of Pages in PDF File: 13

Keywords: street racing, psycho-social, economic, spiritual well-being, self-esteem, self-efficacy

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Date posted: July 9, 2012  

Suggested Citation

Nurullah, Abu Sadat, Makol-Abdul, Pute R. and Rahman, Saodah A. , Gender and Motivations for Street Racing in Malaysia (June 5, 2012). Journal of Sociological Research, Vol. 3, No. 1, pp. 67-79, 2012. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2102725

Contact Information

Abu Sadat Nurullah (Contact Author)
University of Alberta - Department of Sociology ( email )
Edmonton, Alberta T6G 2R6
Canada
Pute R. Makol-Abdul
International Islamic University of Malaysia (IIUM)
P.O. Box 10
Jalan Sg Pusu
Kuala Lumpur, selangor 50728
Malaysia
Saodah A. Rahman
International Islamic University of Malaysia (IIUM)
P.O. Box 10
Jalan Sg Pusu
Kuala Lumpur, selangor 50728
Malaysia
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