Creating profiles of juvenile offenders using functions of aggression and callous-unemotional traits: relations to crime type

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Date
2022-09-18
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American English
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Taylor & Francis
Abstract

A rich line of criminological theories and research has suggested that individual characteristics may be important to predicting criminal activity. However, there is limited research examining how individual characteristics may be related to the type of crime committed (e.g. violent, sex, drug). To provide guidance to these questions, the current set of two studies used latent profile analysis to identify groups of offenders based on individual factors (i.e. proactive and reactive aggression, and callous-unemotional traits), chosen for their interrelatedness and their established associations with crime, and examined whether these groups relate to type, severity or the number of crimes committed across two studies. In both studies, four groups of offenders were identified, but these groups were not associated with offending behaviors or patterns. Findings and implications are discussed.

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Pederson CA, Griffith RL, Nowalis S, Fite PJ. Creating profiles of juvenile offenders using functions of aggression and callous-unemotional traits: relations to crime type. Psychiatr Psychol Law. 2022;30(5):713-736. Published 2022 Sep 18. doi:10.1080/13218719.2022.2116609
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Psychiatry, Psychology and Law
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PMC
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Article
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