Boys' Experimentation and Persistence in Developmental Pathways Toward Serious Delinquency |
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Authors: | Rolf Loeber Kate Keenan Quanwu Zhang |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Psychiatry, School of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA;(2) Department of Psychiatry, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL;(3) School of Criminal Justice, Rutgers University, Newark, NJ |
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Abstract: | We expand on earlier work documenting developmental pathways in disruptive child behavior towards serious forms of delinquency in boys. Three pathways we hypothesized in our previous work: (a) An Authority Conflict Pathway prior to the age of 12, that starts with stubborn behavior, and has defiance as a second stage, and authority avoidance as a third stage; (b) A Covert Pathway that starts with minor convert acts, has property damage as a second stage, and moderate to serious delinquency as a third stage; and (c) An Overt Pathway that starts with minor aggression, has physical fighting as a second stage, and violence as a third stage. We now refine this work by distinguishing between boys who experiment and those who persist in disruptive behavior. Data are presented showing that the fit for the three pathways is better for persisters than for experimenters. Also, the proportion of persisters that enter each pathway at the first stage (rather than at later stages) is higher than that for experimenters. Penetration in each pathway was more common among boys who received a diagnosis of Attention-Deficit Hyperactive Disorder. Boys' rate of offending increased with penetration into pathways and with persistence on more than one pathway. Boys' persistence and advancement in the Overt or the Covert Pathway was almost invariably accompanied by their advancement in the Authority Conflict Pathway. The classification of boys according to persistence and pathways accounted for the majority of high rate offenders, according to both self-report and court adjudicated offenses. |
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Keywords: | developmental pathways disruptive child behavior delinquency in boys authority conflict pathway covert pathway overt pathway |
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