Literature DB >> 19177554

Predictors and outcomes of persistent or age-limited registered criminal behavior: a 30-year longitudinal study of a Swedish urban population.

Lars R Bergman1, Anna-Karin Andershed.   

Abstract

This study uses data from the longitudinal research program Individual Development and Adaptation, where an entire school-grade cohort of children in a middle-size Swedish city (n approximately 1.300) has been followed from ages 10 to 43 and 48 for women and men, respectively. Our findings indicate that the patterns of offending across the life-course differ between genders, where males seem to initiate their offending earlier than females. Further, there are very few women on a persistent offending-trajectory. Focusing on precursors to as well as consequences of offending as indexed in official registers, our results indicate that individuals in the persistent offender group have the most pronounced adjustment problems in school- as well as in middle age. Individual characteristics and behaviors (e.g., aggression, hyperactivity, antisocial behavior) vary systematically between individuals with different developmental offending patterns. The combination of an unstable upbringing and own antisocial behavior seems to be especially predictive for criminality. For persistent offenders, the prevalence of alcohol and psychiatric problems at adult age is high for males and extremely high for females (nine out of ten and six out of ten for each of the two problem types for females). Further, the importance for adjustment of the two-dimensional variation in the number of crimes committed during adolescence and adult age seems to have been surprisingly well captured by the "crude" division into the four offender groups that were used.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2009        PMID: 19177554     DOI: 10.1002/ab.20298

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Aggress Behav        ISSN: 0096-140X            Impact factor:   2.917


  13 in total

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Authors:  Göran B W Söderlund; Sverker Sikström; Jan M Loftesnes; Edmund J Sonuga-Barke
Journal:  Behav Brain Funct       Date:  2010-09-29       Impact factor: 3.759

2.  "Role magnets"? An empirical investigation of popularity trajectories for life-course persistent individuals during adolescence.

Authors:  Jacob T N Young
Journal:  J Youth Adolesc       Date:  2013-04-05

3.  Systematic review of early risk factors for life-course-persistent, adolescence-limited, and late-onset offenders in prospective longitudinal studies.

Authors:  Darrick Jolliffe; David P Farrington; Alex R Piquero; Rolf Loeber; Karl G Hill
Journal:  Aggress Violent Behav       Date:  2017-01-14

4.  Developmental trajectories of aggression from late childhood through adolescence: similarities and differences across gender.

Authors:  Hongling Xie; Deborah A G Drabick; Diane Chen
Journal:  Aggress Behav       Date:  2011-07-11       Impact factor: 2.917

5.  Childhood predictors and age 48 outcomes of self-reports and official records of offending.

Authors:  Eric F Dubow; L Rowell Huesmann; Paul Boxer; Cathy Smith
Journal:  Crim Behav Ment Health       Date:  2014-10

6.  Male antisocial behaviour in adolescence and beyond.

Authors:  Terrie E Moffitt
Journal:  Nat Hum Behav       Date:  2018-02-21

7.  Predicting the transition from juvenile delinquency to adult criminality: Gender-specific influences in two high-risk samples.

Authors:  Kimberly A Rhoades; Leslie D Leve; J Mark Eddy; Patricia Chamberlain
Journal:  Crim Behav Ment Health       Date:  2015-04-28

8.  Long-term consequences of membership in trajectory groups of delinquent behavior in an urban sample: violence, drug use, interpersonal, and neighborhood attributes.

Authors:  Judith S Brook; Jung Yeon Lee; Stephen J Finch; Elaine N Brown; David W Brook
Journal:  Aggress Behav       Date:  2013-06-27       Impact factor: 2.917

9.  Delinquency and peer acceptance in adolescence: a within-person test of Moffitt's hypotheses.

Authors:  Kelly L Rulison; Derek A Kreager; D Wayne Osgood
Journal:  Dev Psychol       Date:  2014-09-22

10.  Family predictors of continuity and change in social and physical aggression from ages 9 to 18.

Authors:  Samuel E Ehrenreich; Kurt J Beron; Dawn Y Brinkley; Marion K Underwood
Journal:  Aggress Behav       Date:  2014-05-28       Impact factor: 2.917

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