712 results on '"CRIMINAL careers"'
Search Results
2. Comparing the criminal careers of organized crime offenders in Italy and the Netherlands.
- Author
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Calderoni, Francesco, Comunale, Tommaso, van der Geest, Victor, and Kleemans, Edward R.
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JUVENILE offenders ,RECIDIVISTS ,IMPLICIT bias ,LAW enforcement ,CRIMINOLOGY ,ORGANIZED crime - Abstract
The concept of organized crime has dynamically evolved, with researchers contending that it is a social construct or an umbrella concept encompassing different empirical manifestations. Scholars have often suggested classifying organized crime groups into those involved in "racketeering" or "governing" and those engaged in "transit crime" or "trading." However, these propositions were never assessed at the level of individual criminal careers. We address two primary objectives: first, we test differences in the criminal careers of organized crime offenders between organized crime contexts that are historically different—comparing Italy, which is primarily known for racketeering organized crime, to the Netherlands, which is characterized more by transit crime. Second, we explore differences between criminal careers of organized crime offenders born in different decades; doing so allows us to measure differences in offending patterns in shifting organized crime contexts due to broader social changes while considering more country-specific changes in law enforcement and organized crime policies. The study relies on the criminal careers of 4480 organized crime offenders in Italy (n = 3360) and the Netherlands (n = 1120). We analyze the distributions of criminal career parameters, crime categories, age-crime curves, and offending trajectories. Offenders in Italy exhibit higher offending, earlier violence, earlier onset, and decline; offenders in the Netherlands display later onset, slower decline, and a greater involvement in drug and property offenses. Also, both samples show generalist offending patterns, long-lasting careers, and involvement in organized crime in adulthood. We also find substantial variation across decades of birth, with younger offenders in both countries reporting higher frequencies. We attribute this to the interplay of increased offending among younger individuals, the implicit selection bias in the sampling, and greater law enforcement pressure due to stricter anti-organized crime policies since the 1980s and 1990s. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Desistance from Intimate Partner Violence and the Role of Victims-Survivors
- Author
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Boxall, Hayley and Boxall, Hayley
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
4. Official Criminal Careers
- Author
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Farrington, David P., Piquero, Alex R., Jennings, Wesley G., Jolliffe, Darrick, Farrington, David P., Piquero, Alex R., Jennings, Wesley G., and Jolliffe, Darrick
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Introduction to Criminal Careers
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Farrington, David P., Piquero, Alex R., Jennings, Wesley G., Jolliffe, Darrick, Farrington, David P., Piquero, Alex R., Jennings, Wesley G., and Jolliffe, Darrick
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- 2023
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6. Asymmetry
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DeLisi, Matt and DeLisi, Matt
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- 2023
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7. Recidiveonderzoek in Nederland: een korte geschiedenis en blik op de toekomst.
- Author
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Weijters, Gijs
- Abstract
Copyright of Justitiële Verkenningen is the property of Boom uitgevers Den Haag and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Criminal Careers Prior to Recruitment into Italian Organized Crime.
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Meneghini, Cecilia, Campedelli, Gian Maria, Calderoni, Francesco, and Comunale, Tommaso
- Subjects
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RECIDIVISTS , *MAFIA , *ORGANIZED crime , *EDUCATIONAL attainment , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *YOUTH societies & clubs - Abstract
Despite growing evidence about heterogeneous pathways leading individuals into organized crime, there is limited knowledge about the differences in the criminal career between individuals who entered criminal organizations in their youth and those who joined at an older age. This study assesses the differences between early and late recruits in the Italian mafias through logistic regressions considering several criminal career parameters computed on the period prior to recruitment. Results show that recruitment in the mafias is far from a homogenous process. Early recruits report an early criminal onset, lower educational attainment, more serious offenses within a shorter time-span, and more frequent violent co-offending; late recruits show a later onset, more prolific and versatile—but less serious—offending. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
9. The Joint Impact of Co-occupants and Co-defendants' Criminal Behavior on Adolescents' Criminal Behavior: A Cross-Lagged Analysis.
- Author
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Wientjes, Jacqueline A. M., Scholte, Ron H. J., Cillessen, Antonius H. N., and H. Delsing, Marc J. M.
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JUVENILE offenders , *BEHAVIORAL assessment , *JUVENILE delinquency , *DELINQUENT behavior , *CRIMINAL behavior , *POLICE reports - Abstract
The present study investigated the joint impact of co-occupants and codefendants criminal behavior on adolescent criminal behavior using official Dutch police records. Co-occupant and co-defendant criminal behavior were used as proxies for family and peer criminal behavior, respectively. Data spanning 8 years (2010–2017) were analyzed from 56,802 adolescents, their co-occupants and co-defendants. Cross-lagged analyses were used to investigate prospective effects of co-occupant and co-defendant delinquency on adolescent delinquency. For males, prospective effects were found of co-defendant on adolescent delinquency violent offences, violent property offences, and nonviolent property offences. For females, prospective effects of co-defendants' delinquency were found for nonviolent property offences. Our findings underscore that having co-defendants with delinquent behavior is an important risk factor for delinquent activities in adolescence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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10. Criminal Careers of Domestic Sex Traffickers in the Netherlands: Distinguishing Different Offending Trajectories
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Kragten-Heerdink, Suzanne L. J., van de Weijer, Steve G. A., and Weerman, Frank M.
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- 2024
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11. Age and crime: Empirical and theoretical approaches of criminal adult onset
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Kontopoulou E.
- Subjects
age ,crime ,adult criminal onset ,criminal careers ,Social pathology. Social and public welfare. Criminology ,HV1-9960 - Abstract
According to the age-crime curve, prevalence in crime displays an increase over the period from the late childhood to adolescence, a peak towards the end of adolescence and a downward trend afterwards during adulthood. In this context, the highest rate of desistance is observed towards the end of adolescence and the beginning of adulthood regardless of the time of antisocial or criminal onset. However, research experience has highlighted the existence of offenders who appear to engage in crime for the first-time during adulthood. The present analysis focuses on the empirical experience regarding the dimensions of the phenomenon as well as the factors associated with its occurrence. At the same time, particular reference will be made to the theoretical approaches to the phenomenon in an attempt to identify the process whose starting point is placed in minority and, during the period of transition to adulthood, leads to criminal onset and a criminal career.
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- 2023
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12. Gendered Entitlement or Generally Violent? Sociodemographic, Developmental, and Gender-Based Attitudinal Characteristics of Men Who Commit Homicide.
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Eriksson, Li, McPhedran, Samara, Mazerolle, Paul, and Wortley, Richard
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HOMICIDE , *VIOLENCE , *RACISM , *SOCIOECONOMICS , *PUBLIC health - Abstract
The study examined "gendered" and "general" factors associated with homicide using interviews with men convicted of murder or manslaughter in Australia. We compared men committing intimate partner femicide (IPF; n = 68) with men killing female non-intimate partners (MF; n = 44) and male non-intimate partners (MM; n = 135). They shared developmental and socio-economic characteristics. MM men reported extensive criminal histories and serious substance problems compared with IPF men. Many IPF men had perpetrated partner violence. Similarities existed across jealousy and marital role attitudes, though IPF men more likely condoned wife abuse and behaviorally controlled partners. Policies informed by complexity and diversity are important. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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13. Psychopathy among condemned capital murderers.
- Author
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DeLisi, Matt, Peters, David J., Hochstetler, Andy, Butler, H. Daniel, and Vaughn, Michael G.
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PSYCHOPATHY , *ANTISOCIAL personality disorders , *SADOMASOCHISM , *MURDERERS , *HOMICIDE rates , *PRISON sentences - Abstract
Psychopathy is an important forensic mental health construct. Despite this importance, the research base of psychopathy among individuals convicted of capital murder is limited. Archival data were collected from a sample of 636 persons convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death in the State of California. Psychopathy was assessed using the Psychopathy Checklist – Revised (PCL‐R) instrument. Data on criminal careers and other behavioral disorders were also extracted. The sample mean PCL‐R total score was 23.31 (SD = 9.92) and one‐third of individuals in this sample were considered clinically psychopathic with PCL‐R total scores of 30 or greater. Factor analytic examination yielded support for four facets: affective, interpersonal, lifestyle, and antisocial. Criterion validity findings revealed positive correlations of psychopathy scores with Antisocial Personality Disorder (ρ = 0.72), Conduct Disorder (ρ = 0.46), sexual sadism (ρ = 0.24), Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ρ = 0.20), ADHD (ρ = 0.15), arrest charges (r = 0.56), prison sentences (r = 0.53), and age of arrest onset (r = −0.57). Individuals convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death reflect heterogeneity in psychopathy with some individuals exhibiting pronounced psychopathic features. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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14. Criminal Careers and Immigration: An Analysis of Offending Over the Life Course Among Homicide Inmates in Texas.
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Orrick, Erin A., Guerra, Chris, and Piquero, Alex R.
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RECIDIVISTS , *HOMICIDE , *CRIMINAL records , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *CRIME - Abstract
The purpose of this study is to examine differences in patterns of criminal arrests between US citizens and foreign citizens among a sample of individuals incarcerated for homicide in Texas. Data for this project come from administrative records of inmates incarcerated in Texas for homicide. Drawing from the criminal careers literature, official arrest records are assessed to compare differences in criminal histories with growth curve models for the examination of criminal careers of non-Texas born US citizens and foreign citizens. Notable findings are that the age-crime curves are remarkably similar between the two groups, but the curves differ in degree, with those of US citizens peaking significantly higher across all crime types examined. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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15. Do the reasons why people desist from crime vary by age, length of offending career or lifestyle factors?
- Author
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Farrall, Stephen and Shapland, Joanna
- Subjects
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DESISTANCE from crime , *SOCIAL context , *CRIMINAL careers , *CRIMINOLOGY , *LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Research into desistance from crime has progressed enormously in the past three decades. Despite this tremendous growth, some issues remain unexplored. Among these is the extent to which the reasons why people stop offending might vary by the age at which they stop, and their previous lifestyles. Herein we explore the extent to which the reasons why people desist are associated with their age, and the length and nature of their criminal career. We find that there are no particular associations between the reasons for their desistance and any of these variables, though social context is important. So particular social contexts are seen by those desisting as key to their wish to desist, but they may occur at different ages and it is when they are salient to that individual that they promote action. We close by discussing why this might be the case and the ramifications for theories of desistance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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16. Criminal Careers of Burglars and Robbers in the Netherlands
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Kros, Mathijs, Piersma, Tjeerd W., and Beijersbergen, Karin A.
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- 2023
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17. Criminal careers and the crime drop in Scotland, 1989-2011 : an exploration of conviction trends across age and sex
- Author
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Matthews, Benjamin Michael, Norris, Paul, McVie, Susan, and Bissett, Catherine
- Subjects
364.9411 ,criminal careers ,crime drop ,age-crime curve ,sex ,data visualization - Abstract
Rates of recorded crime have been falling in many countries in Western Europe, including Scotland, since the early 1990s. This marks the reversal of a trend of increasing levels of crime seen since the 1950s. Despite this important recent change, most analyses of the ‘crime drop’ have focused on recorded crime or victimisation rates aggregated to national or regional level. It is little known how patterns of offending or conviction have changed at the individual level. As a result it is not known how the crime drop is manifest in changing offending or conviction rates, or how patterns of criminal careers have changed over this period. The aim of this thesis is to explore trends in convictions across a number of criminal careers parameters – the age-crime curve, prevalence and frequency, polarisation and conviction pathways – over the course of the crime drop in Scotland. The results presented here are based on a secondary analysis of the Scottish Offenders Index, a census of convictions in Scottish courts, between 1989 and 2011. Analysis is conducted using a range of descriptive statistical techniques to examine change across age, sex and time. Change in the age-crime curve is analysed using data visualisation techniques and descriptive statistics. Standardisation and decomposition analysis is used to analyse the effects of prevalence, frequency and population change. Trends in conviction are also examined between groups identified statistically using Latent Class Analysis to assess the polarisation of convictions, and trends in the movement between these groups over time provides an indication of changing pathways of conviction. This thesis finds a sharp contrast between falling rates of conviction for young people, particularly young men, and increases in conviction rates for those between their mid-twenties and mid-forties, with distinct periods of change between 1989- 2000, 2000-2007 and 2007-2011. These trends are driven primarily by changes in the prevalence of conviction, and result in an increasingly even distribution of convictions over age. Analysis across latent classes shows some evidence of convictions becoming less polarised for younger men and women but increasingly polarised for older men and women. Similarities in trends analysed across latent classes between men and women of the same age suggest that the process driving these trends is broadly similar within age groups. Increases in conviction rates for those over 21 are explained by both greater onset of conviction and higher persistence in conviction, particularly between 1998 and 2004. The results of this thesis suggest that explanations of the crime drop must have a greater engagement with contrasting trends across age and sex to be able to properly explain falling conviction rates. These results also reinforce the need for criminal careers research to better understand the impact of recent changes social context on patterns of convictions over people’s lives. The distinct periods identified in these results suggest a potential effect of changes in operation of the justice system in Scotland leading to high rates of convictions in the early 2000s. However, the descriptive focus of this analysis and its reliance upon administrative data from a single country mean this thesis cannot claim to definitively explain these trends. As a result, replication of this research in another jurisdiction is encouraged to assess whether trends identified are particular to Scotland.
- Published
- 2017
18. Survival of the Recidivistic? Revealing Factors Associated with the Criminal Career Length of Multiple Homicide Offenders.
- Author
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Campedelli, Gian Maria and Yaksic, Enzo
- Subjects
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SERIAL murderers , *CRIMINOLOGICAL research , *KAPLAN-Meier estimator , *PROPORTIONAL hazards models , *INFERENTIAL statistics - Abstract
Relying on a sample of 1,381 US-based multiple homicide offenders (MHOs), we study the duration of the careers of this extremely violent category of offenders through Kaplan–Meier estimation and Cox Proportional Hazard regression. We investigate the characteristics of such careers in terms of length and we provide an inferential analysis investigating correlates of career duration. The models indicate that MHOs employing multiple methods, younger MHOs and MHOs that acted in more than one US state have higher odds of longer careers. When controlling for career-based attributes, female MHOs are also correlated with longer careers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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19. Does the Premium Fit the Risk? The Role of Criminal Escalation in Case Processing.
- Author
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Yan, Shi and Walker, Jason W.
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CRIMINAL procedure , *RISK premiums , *CRIMINAL records , *RECIDIVISTS , *IMPRISONMENT - Abstract
Legal and qualitative studies have highlighted that courtroom actors consider multiple aspects of criminal records. However, most quantitative studies on sentencing only included the number of prior convictions or arrests, with little attention to the seriousness trends of those priors. Taking stock from studies on criminal careers, we used group-based trajectory modeling (GBTM) to identify patterns of escalation and de-escalation among a defendant sample in New York State (n = 56,017), and then examined the role of trajectory groups in four decision points: dismissal, charge reduction, incarceration, and incarceration length. We found that escalation, de-escalation, and a higher stable level of crime seriousness were associated with less favorable outcomes at multiple decision points. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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20. Challenging common police perceptions of career criminals and serious offenders
- Author
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Roach, Jason, author
- Published
- 2023
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21. Politics, Research Design, and the 'Architecture' of Criminal Careers Studies.
- Author
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Farrall, Stephen
- Subjects
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CRIMINAL careers , *CRIMINOLOGY , *CRIMINAL behavior , *CRIMINOLOGICAL research , *CRIMINOLOGICAL models & modeling - Abstract
Criminal careers research is one of the bedrocks—if not the bedrock—of criminology. It remains a key focal point of criminological research and has embraced ideas and theories from sociology, psychology, psychiatry and urban and community studies. Despite the widening of the landscape of what might be termed 'the criminological enterprise' (to include victimology, prisons research, punishment, deterrence and environmental criminology), criminal careers (now differentiated into studies of onset, persistence and desistance) remains a key plank of criminology. This article critiques the research design of longitudinal studies of criminal careers, arguing that a key explanatory factor has been consistently overlooked in criminal careers research due, in part, to the research design of such studies. In focussing on the role of politically motivated changes to economic policies and the restructuring of the industrial base this produced, I empirically relate individual offending careers to politics in ways very few have done before. The article touches upon a series of suggestions for how empirical studies of criminal careers might be improved. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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22. Participation and Frequency in Criminal Convictions across 25 Successive Birth Cohorts: Collectivity, Polarization, or Convergence?
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Sivertsson, Fredrik, Nilsson, Anders, and Bäckman, Olof
- Subjects
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CRIMINAL convictions , *PANEL analysis , *RECIDIVISTS , *PARTICIPATION , *CRIME statistics , *CRIME - Abstract
Against the backdrop of an overall declining crime trend our overarching objective is to explore whether this development has concealed any degree of divergence between participation and frequency in crime. We employ Swedish longitudinal data comprising 25 complete birth cohorts born between 1960 and 1984 and followed to age 30 using convictions data. The results show a complex pattern of change, by which the crime rate partly conceals divergent processes between participation and frequency. In particular, among the males we find a consistent decrease in the size of the convicted population, whereas the frequency of crimes among convicted offenders has increased across cohorts born during the early 1970s and later. We discuss the results against both behavioral and reactional mechanisms and conclude that future crime trends research should consider a broad range of criminal career parameters which cannot be discerned using aggregate crime data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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23. Co-offending and Criminal Careers in Organized Crime
- Author
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Meneghini, Cecilia and Calderoni, Francesco
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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24. Conclusions
- Author
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Loeber, Rolf, Jennings, Wesley G., Ahonen, Lia, Piquero, Alex R., Farrington, David P., Loeber, Rolf, Jennings, Wesley G., Ahonen, Lia, Piquero, Alex R., and Farrington, David P.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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25. Frequency, Persistence/Continuity, Onset, Desistance, Career Duration, Recidivism, and Chronic Offending
- Author
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Loeber, Rolf, Jennings, Wesley G., Ahonen, Lia, Piquero, Alex R., Farrington, David P., Loeber, Rolf, Jennings, Wesley G., Ahonen, Lia, Piquero, Alex R., and Farrington, David P.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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26. The Pittsburgh Girls Study and the Prevalence of Self-Reported Delinquency
- Author
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Loeber, Rolf, Jennings, Wesley G., Ahonen, Lia, Piquero, Alex R., Farrington, David P., Loeber, Rolf, Jennings, Wesley G., Ahonen, Lia, Piquero, Alex R., and Farrington, David P.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Introduction to Female vs. Male Criminal Careers
- Author
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Loeber, Rolf, Jennings, Wesley G., Ahonen, Lia, Piquero, Alex R., Farrington, David P., Loeber, Rolf, Jennings, Wesley G., Ahonen, Lia, Piquero, Alex R., and Farrington, David P.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Criminal Careers Among Female Perpetrators of Family and Nonfamily Homicide in Australia.
- Author
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Eriksson, Li, McPhedran, Samara, Caman, Shilan, Mazerolle, Paul, Wortley, Richard, and Johnson, Holly
- Subjects
- *
HOMICIDE , *CORRECTIONAL institutions , *SELF-evaluation , *CRIMINALS , *FAMILIES , *CRIME , *INTERVIEWING , *CRIMINOLOGY , *RESEARCH funding , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *WOMEN'S health , *CRIMINAL justice system - Abstract
Knowledge of women's pathways to serious offending, including homicide, is limited. This study contributes to a small but growing body of literature examining the criminal careers of serious female offenders by using interview data with females convicted of murder or manslaughter in Australia to examine various dimensions of their criminal careers, specifically, prevalence, frequency, age of onset, duration, and offending variety. In particular, in this study we compared criminal career dimensions across women who had killed a family member (e.g., intimate partner, children) and those whose victims were not part of the family unit (i.e., acquaintances or strangers). Our findings reveal differences between female homicide offenders who kill within and outside of the family unit. Although both groups had comparable overall lifetime prevalence of self-reported participation in criminal offending, findings indicate that participation among the family group was typically at low levels of frequency, of limited duration, and with relatively little variety in categories of offending. The family group also reported lower contact with the criminal justice system compared with the nonfamily group, and were less likely to have experienced some form of criminal/legal sanction in the 12 months prior to the homicide incident. This suggests that women who kill family members are more "conventional" than their nonfamily counterparts, in terms of having low and time-limited (i.e., short duration) lifetime participation in criminal offending. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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29. Theoretical Perspectives on White-Collar Crime
- Author
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Levi, Michael
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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30. Life-Course Criminal Trajectories of Mafia Members.
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Campedelli, Gian Maria, Calderoni, Francesco, Comunale, Tommaso, and Meneghini, Cecilia
- Subjects
- *
MAFIA , *RECIDIVISTS , *OLDER people , *CRIMINALS , *CRIMINAL records , *CRIMINAL behavior - Abstract
Through a novel data set comprising the criminal records of 11,138 convicted mafia offenders, we compute criminal career parameters and trajectories through group-based trajectory modeling. Mafia offenders report prolific and persistent careers (16.1 crimes over 16.5 years on average), with five distinct trajectories (low frequency, high frequency, early starter, moderate persistence, high persistence). While showing some similarities with general offenders, the trajectories of mafia offenders also exhibit significant differences, with several groups offending well into their middle and late adulthood, notwithstanding intense criminal justice sanctions. These patterns suggest that several mafia offenders are life-course persisters and career criminals and that the involvement in the mafias is a negative turning point extending the criminal careers beyond those observed in general offenders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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31. De la cárcel al barrio. Caracterización cualitativa de la reincidencia criminal en Colombia.
- Author
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José Ariza, Libardo, Iturralde, Manuel, and Tamayo Arboleda, Fernando León
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RECIDIVISM ,CRIME prevention ,CRIME ,QUANTITATIVE research ,CRIMINAL careers ,RECIDIVISTS - Abstract
Copyright of Estudios de Derecho is the property of Estudios de Derecho and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Examining Mate Similarity for Chronic and Non-chronic Criminal Behavior
- Author
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van de Weijer, Steve G. A. and Boutwell, Brian B.
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Youth crime as a 'way of life'? Prevalence and criminal career correlates among a sample of juvenile detainees in Australia.
- Author
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Payne, Jason L and Roffey, Nadienne
- Subjects
- *
CRIMINAL careers , *JUVENILE delinquency - Abstract
For more than 60 years, scholars have often likened chronic and persistent offending to 'living a criminal way of life', yet these evocative motifs have not received much empirical scrutiny. In particular, the so-called criminal life-style is often conceptualized as something the chronic young offender opts into as an alternative to other pro-social pathways. Whereas for older offenders, it is something into which they find themselves trapped and unable to escape. The idea that crime is a chosen 'way of life' among chronic young offenders has not yet received sufficient empirical scrutiny. In this study, we use archival data of nationally representative cohort (n = 373) of young offenders in Australian custodial centers who were each asked whether crime was their 'way of life'. From this, we estimate its prevalence and criminal-career correlates, finding that one in three strongly identify with crime as their way of life. Self-identification is also found to be strongly correlated with Indigenous status even after controlling for different features of the juvenile criminal career. In all, our data paint a vivid portrait of a criminal identity that, for the young offender, likely signals a perceived inevitability that evolves in the context of structurally and culturally conditioned opportunities. Understanding this phenomenon among youthful offenders is important if we are to be successful in our attempts to curtail criminal continuity through desistance informed interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Drug Dealing and Gun Carrying Go Hand in Hand: Examining How Juvenile Offenders' Gun Carrying Changes Before and After Drug Dealing Spells Across 84 Months.
- Author
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Docherty, Meagan, Mulvey, Edward, Beardslee, Jordan, Sweeten, Gary, and Pardini, Dustin
- Subjects
- *
JUVENILE offenders , *DRUG traffic , *FIXED effects model , *FIREARMS , *GUN laws - Abstract
Objectives: This study aims to examine whether periods of marijuana and other illicit drug dealing ("spells" of dealing) are associated with changes in young male offenders' gun carrying behavior. Methods: This paper uses 84 months of data from a sample of 479 serious juvenile male offenders who were assessed every 6 months for 3 years and then annually for 4 years. At each assessment, participants reported on engagement in illicit behaviors, including drug dealing and gun carrying, in each month since the prior interview. We used fixed effects models to assess within-individual changes in participants' gun carrying immediately before, during, and right after a dealing spell, while controlling for relevant time varying confounds (e.g., gang involvement, exposure to violence). Additionally, we tested moderation by type of drug sold. Results: There was a slight increase in gun carrying right before a drug dealing spell (OR = 1.3–1.4), then a more pronounced increase in gun carrying during the months of a drug dealing spell (OR = 8.0–12.8). Right after a dealing spell ends, youths' gun carrying dropped dramatically, but remained significantly elevated relative to their baseline levels (OR = 2.6–2.8). The association between drug dealing spells and increases in gun carrying was stronger when participants dealt hard drugs (e.g., cocaine, heroin) relative to marijuana. Conclusions: These results suggest that designing and implementing programs to prevent the initiation of drug dealing and decrease involvement in drug dealing may help to substantially reduce illegal gun carrying and firearm violence among delinquent males. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Fledgling psychopaths at midlife: Forensic features, criminal careers, and coextensive psychopathology
- Author
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Matt DeLisi, Alan J. Drury, and Michael J. Elbert
- Subjects
Fledgling psychopathy ,Offenders ,Forensic ,Criminal careers ,Psychopathology ,Law ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
Lynam's fledgling psychopathy hypothesis advanced that youth who manifest Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD), Conduct Disorder (CD), and ADHD display many behaviors that are consistent with psychopathy seen among adults, but research support for it is equivocal. We know littleabout the developmental course of fledgling psychopathy into adulthood and even less is known about its comorbidity at midlife. Drawing on data from a near population of federal correctional clients in the Midwestern United States, the current study employed a retrospective design to compare those who had lifetime diagnoses for ODD, CD, and ADHD to other correctional clients. Fledgling psychopathy was significantly correlated with multiple substance use disorders, forensic features indicative of a criminal lifestyle (e.g., gang activity, gunshot and stab wounds), and diverse forms of mental illness and personality disorders. Fledgling psychopaths had significantly earlier starting, extensive, and more violent criminal careers than other clients, and fledgling psychopathy was associated more career arrest charges and with 544% increased odds of being in the 90th percentile for career arrest charges. These findings are consistent with fledgling psychopathy and its traversing association with coextensive psychopathology and behavioral impairment at midlife.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. The criminal careers of those imprisoned for hate crime in the UK.
- Author
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Jolliffe, Darrick and Farrington, David P.
- Subjects
RECIDIVISTS ,VIOLENT crimes ,HATE crimes ,VIOLENT criminals ,PRISON release ,VOCATIONAL guidance ,CRIMINAL records - Abstract
Hate crime research has increased, but there are very few studies examining hate crime offenders. It is, therefore, difficult to determine to what extent those who perpetrate this offence might be different from those who have not committed hate crime. This study is the first to provide an account of the demographics and criminal histories of those serving time in prison for committing a hate crime. It is based on a large complete population of offenders in the UK. Hate crime offenders released from prison were found to have prolific criminal careers, having committed a wide range and large number of different types of offences. When compared with those who committed a general (non-hate) violent offence, violent hate crime offenders were significantly older and were considerably more prolific in their previous offending. Violent hate crime appeared quantitatively, as opposed to qualitatively, different from violent non-hate crime, but this was less clearly true when those who had committed public order hate crime were compared with other public order offenders. Interventions to reduce the later offending of violent hate crime offenders should be based on the effective interventions that exist for violent offenders, but should take into account knowledge about the surprisingly prolific criminal careers of hate crime offenders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Denial in Sex Offending Treatment: Examining Criminal Career Diversity.
- Author
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Zara, Georgia, Farrington, David P., and Jung, Sandy
- Subjects
- *
SEX crimes , *RECIDIVISTS , *SEX offenders - Abstract
Sex offenders commonly exhibit some degree of denial of their offending. Past research has shown that denial conflicts with treatment completion, but does not necessarily increase sexual reoffending risk. This study explores whether the impact of denial upon the treatment of sex offenders is unequivocal or influenced by other factors, such as criminal career variables and dynamic risk. Thirty-five convicted male sex offenders in Italy were assessed for criminal career characteristics (e.g., heterogeneous versus specialized offending), for the nature of denial, and for dynamic risk factors. Interventions for sex offenders may be more effective if they are designed to differentiate between heterogeneous offenders who are difficult to engage in treatment, and specialized sex offenders who are more likely to engage in and complete treatment, regardless of their level of denial. Heterogeneous and specialized sex offenders pose different risks and these differences need to be taken into account in treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Politics, Social and Economic Change, and Crime: Exploring the Impact of Contextual Effects on Offending Trajectories.
- Author
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Farrall, Stephen, Gray, Emily, and Mike Jones, Phil
- Subjects
- *
CRIMINOLOGICAL research , *CRIMINAL careers , *LIFE course approach , *CRIMINAL behavior -- Social aspects , *ECONOMIC impact of crime - Abstract
Do government policies increase the likelihood that some citizens will become persistent criminals? Using criminological concepts such as the idea of a "criminal career" and sociological concepts such as the life course, this article assesses the outcome of macro-level economic policies on individuals' engagement in crime. Few studies in political science, sociology, or criminology directly link macroeconomic policies to individual offending. Employing individual-level longitudinal data, this article tracks a sample of Britons born in 1970 from childhood to adulthood and examines their offending trajectories through the early 1980s to see the effects of economic policies on individuals' repeated offending. A model is developed with data from the British 1970 Birth Cohort Study that incorporates individuals, families, and schools and takes account of national-level economic policies (driven by New Right political ideas). Findings suggest that economic restructuring was a key causal factor in offending during the period. Criminologists are encouraged to draw on ideas from political science to help explain offending careers and show how political choices in the management of the economy encourage individual-level responses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Cronicidad, violencia y longitud de trayectoria criminal. Hombres detenidos por violencia doméstica.
- Author
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Valdivia-Devia, Mauricio, Carlos Oyanedel, Juan, Andrés-Pueyo, Antonio, Fuentes Araya, Marta, and Valdivia-Monzón, Mauricio
- Subjects
- *
VIOLENT crimes , *DOMESTIC violence , *HOME environment , *CRIMINAL careers , *CRIMINOLOGY , *RECIDIVISM , *CRIMINALS , *CRIME - Abstract
Los delincuentes crónicos resultan ser los responsables de la mayor parte de la actividad criminal, además de ser los más persistentes y violentos. Existe escasa evidencia longitudinal que permita conocer cómo se manifiesta la cronicidad en agresores de violencia doméstica. El objetivo de esta investigación es identificar el criterio más adecuado para diferenciar a los hombres crónicos y establecer la relación que existe entre cronicidad, violencia, versatilidad y duración de la carrera criminal en 10 505 hombres chilenos detenidos por delitos de violencia en el ámbito familiar en el 2007, con base en todas las nuevas detenciones producidas los siguientes diez años. El diseño es longitudinal pseudoprospectivo, tal como si correspondiera a un estudio longitudinal prospectivo. Los resultados muestran que tres o más delitos bastan para identificar adecuadamente carreras criminales crónicas, y que un 12.7% del total de hombres pueden considerarse graves, violentos y crónicos, al presentar una trayectoria criminal de entre ocho y diez años, ser responsables de más del 37% del total de las reincidencias, alcanzar un promedio de delitos significativamente alto y versátiles, así como una elevada prevalencia en delitos violentos. Chronical criminals turn out to be responsible of most of the criminal activity, in addition to being the most persistent and violent. There exists limited longitudinal evidence that allows knowing how chronicity manifests itself in domestic violence aggressors. The objective of this investigation is to identify the most appropriate criteria to differentiate chronic men and establish the relationship between chronicity, violence and duration of the criminal career in 10 505 Chilean men arrested for domestic violence crimes in 2007, based on all new arrests produced the next 10 years. The design is a longitudinal pseudo-prospective, as if it corresponded to a prospective longitudinal study. The results show that three or more crimes are enough to properly identify chronic criminal careers, and that 12.7% of all men can be considered as serious, violent and chronic, presenting a criminal trajectory between eight and ten years, being responsible for more than 37% of total recidivism, reach a significantly high average of crimes and high prevalence of violent crimes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. The Impact of Juvenile Sex Offending on the Adult Criminal Career.
- Author
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Reale, Kylie, McCuish, Evan, and Corrado, Raymond
- Subjects
SEX crimes ,RECIDIVISTS ,VOCATIONAL guidance ,JUVENILE offenders ,CRIMINAL behavior ,VIOLENT criminals ,ADULTS ,CRIME - Abstract
Although past studies demonstrated the heterogeneity of the criminal career patterns of juveniles with sexual offenses (JSOs), such studies did not directly assess whether JSOs have different adult offending outcomes compared with juvenile nonsex offenders. Using data on a subsample of males from the Incarcerated Serious and Violent Young Offender Study, JSOs (n = 78), juveniles with violent offenses (JVOs; n = 550), and juveniles with nonviolent offenses (JNVOs; n = 281) were compared across a variety of adult offending outcomes. JSOs were not associated with a specific trajectory of general offending in adulthood, nor were they associated with a range of adult criminal career parameters (e.g., frequency, severity, specialization, and versatility). However, a range of other indicators of juvenile offending were associated with general offending in adulthood. For juvenile males who experience incarceration, many elements of their offending history mattered for adult offending outcomes, but not sexual offending. Policy implications for treatment and management are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Lifelong Conviction Pathways and Self-Reported Offending: Towards a Deeper Comprehension of Criminal Career Development.
- Author
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Basto-Pereira, Miguel and Farrington, David P
- Subjects
- *
SELF-report inventories , *CRIMINAL careers , *CAREER development , *LONGITUDINAL method , *CRIMINOLOGY - Abstract
This article investigates to what extent life-course self-reported offending is related to the four developmental pathways model of criminal careers. Self-reported offending from ages 10 to 48 years is analyzed in the Cambridge Study in Delinquent Development, which is a prospective longitudinal survey of the development of offending. Vandalism, shoplifting, assault and fraud were self-reported by more than half of the non-convicted males; however, individuals in convicted pathways had significantly more self-reported offences. In particular, versatile serious recidivists had a large number of self-reported offences, an earlier age of onset and a later age of desistance. A theoretical approach to criminal careers is proposed, which relates childhood vulnerabilities to lifelong self-reported offending and official criminal careers. The findings suggest that the key criminological research issue is how and why any person exceeds normative levels of offending, between the expected beginning in childhood/adolescence and the expected ending during middle adulthood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Childhood Risk Factors for Self-Reported Versus Official Life-Course-Persistent, Adolescence-Limited, and Late-Onset Offending.
- Author
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Zara, Georgia and Farrington, David P.
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGICAL child abuse ,RECIDIVISTS ,CHILDHOOD friendships - Abstract
There has been no prior research comparing risk factors for categories of convicted individuals (C-types: life-course-persistent; adolescence-limited; late-onset) compared with the corresponding categories of individuals who self-reported offending (SR-types). This article examines the extent to which these convicted and self-reported categories of individuals overlap, and explores childhood risk factors that predict categories of C-types and SR-types. Criminal career information about individuals involved in the Cambridge Study in Delinquent Development (CSDD) is used; 25 childhood factors were analyzed. C-types and SR-types were more problematic than both official and SR nonoffenders. Life-course persisters, adolescence-limited offenders, and nonoffenders overlapped in official records and self-reports, but late-onset offenders did not. C-types were significantly similar to SR-types in childhood risk factors; only a few differences were found. The differences between C-types and SR-types might be better conceptualized as quantitative rather than qualitative. Implications for prevention and intervention are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Official Criminal Careers
- Author
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Jennings, Wesley G., Loeber, Rolf, Pardini, Dustin A., Piquero, Alex R., Farrington, David P., Jennings, Wesley G., Loeber, Rolf, Pardini, Dustin A., Piquero, Alex R., and Farrington, David P.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Introduction to Criminal Careers
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Jennings, Wesley G., Loeber, Rolf, Pardini, Dustin A., Piquero, Alex R., Farrington, David P., Jennings, Wesley G., Loeber, Rolf, Pardini, Dustin A., Piquero, Alex R., and Farrington, David P.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Self-Control Theory and Crime
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Gottfredson, Michael
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Does Criminal Specialization Predict Case Processing?
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Yan, Shi
- Subjects
- *
CRIMINALS , *LATENT class analysis (Statistics) , *CRIMINAL careers , *CRIMINOLOGY , *COURTS - Abstract
Theories of sentencing have pointed out the association between the sentence and the courtroom workgroup's joint assessment of defendants' risk and culpability. One of the most important indicators of risk and culpability is prior criminal records. Types of crimes and pattern of prior criminal events are an important part of the legal discourse around sentencing. This discussion is conceptually similar to the criminal career concept of criminal specialization. In the present study, latent class analysis (LCA) is used to measure criminal specialization. The cumulative disadvantage perspective is incorporated into the article to model how specialization predicts a series of case processing outcomes—dismissal, charge reduction, incarceration, and length of incarceration. The analysis found specialists of the current crime—robbery defendants who specialized in robbery and larceny defendants who specialized in larceny—generally received less favorable outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Developmental and life-course explanations of offending.
- Author
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McGee, Tara Renae and Farrington, David P.
- Subjects
- *
LIFE course approach , *CRIMINOLOGY , *CRIMINAL careers , *CRIMINOLOGICAL theory , *CRIMINOLOGISTS - Abstract
Developmental and life-course theories of crime collectively can be viewed as theories which take an age-graded approach to explaining the development of offending based on empirical observations from prospective longitudinal studies. This paper provides not only an account of the key developmental and life-course theories of crime but also moves beyond this to include a comparison of the key postulates of these theories. To do this we first provide a brief account of the origins of developmental and life-course criminology and identify the theoretical origins in classic criminological theory. We also provide a brief description of some of the most prominent developmental and life-course theories of crime. This is all to set the stage for an extensive comparison of the key postulates of developmental and life-course theories. We argue that, in order to move forward with these theories, there must be systematic empirical testing of the key postulates to determine which parts of the theories are empirically supported and which parts need updating or revision. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Understanding desistance: a critical review of theories of desistance.
- Author
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Weaver, Beth
- Subjects
- *
CRIME , *SOCIAL integration , *CRIMINOLOGY , *CRIMINOLOGISTS , *CRIMINAL careers - Abstract
Informed by a comprehensive review of theories and research into desistance (Weaver, 2015. Offending and desistance: The importance of social relations. Oxon: Routledge), this article advances a critical and contemporary overview of the main theories of desistance, drawing on illustrative empirical research. It begins by addressing definitional issues, before showing how various theories of desistance differently explain the phenomena of giving up crime. The article concludes by engaging with its limitations and relatively muted impact on policy and practice. It is argued that desistance research, and its interpretation in both policy and practice, remains very individualistic in focus, and often disconnected from specific analyses of the cultural and structural contexts in which both offending and desistance take place. In considering implications for future research, the article suggests that the desistance paradigm might be enhanced by attending to contemporary critiques of its limitations. In particular, this would suggest the application of intersectional methods and analyses, analyses of divergences in desistance pathways by crime type, enhanced critical and contextualizing analyses of cultural and structural influences on desistance, and, beyond individual desistance, a focus on the challenges of social integration for people with convictions, to better inform and shape penal policy and practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Comparing the criminal careers and childhood risk factors of persistent, chronic, and persistent-chronic offenders.
- Author
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Whitten, Tyson, McGee, Tara R., Homel, Ross, Farrington, David P., and Ttofi, Maria
- Subjects
- *
CRIMINAL careers , *CRIMINAL behavior , *CRIMINOLOGY - Abstract
There have been few efforts to conceptually and empirically distinguish persistent and chronic offenders, despite the prominence of these concepts in the criminological literature. Research has not yet examined if different childhood risk factors are associated with offenders who have the longest criminal careers (persistent offenders), commit the most offences (chronic offenders), or both (persistent-chronic offenders). We address this gap using data from the Cambridge Study in Delinquent Development. Poverty, poor school attainment, and family stress had a pervasive impact on all forms of offending in correlational analyses. Longer criminal career durations were associated with fewer childhood risk factors than was the case for chronic offenders. Chronic offenders were significantly more likely than persistent offenders to experience many environmental risks in childhood. When controlling for all other risk factors, hyperactivity and parental separation uniquely predicted persistent offending, while high daring and large family size uniquely predicted chronic offending. Our analyses point to the need for responses based on a philosophy of "proportionate universalism," where universal multisystemic crime prevention strategies that benefit all children incorporate program components that are known to influence the unique risk factors for both persistent and chronic offending. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Stop and Go: Explaining the Timing of Intermittency in Criminal Careers.
- Author
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Ouellet, Frédéric
- Subjects
- *
INTERMITTENCY (Nuclear physics) , *CRIMINAL careers , *DYNAMICS , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *LIFE history interviews - Abstract
Few offenders maintain a linear or constant path in their criminal activities; instead, zigzag paths characterize most criminal careers. The present study seeks to understand the dynamics of such intermittent cycles and examines the effect of direct experience with the justice system and offender success in criminal ventures on the likelihood that offenders will interrupt and then restart their illegal activities. Using the method of life history calendars, the study is based on detailed criminal career data from 172 offenders involved in lucrative forms of crime. Results show the relevance and complementarity of sanctions and dimensions of criminal achievement in understanding an offending path. The research design highlights the importance of considering the timing of circumstances in understanding zigzag paths. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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