Children at risk for delinquency: A follow-up comparison of aggressive children and children who steal |
| |
Authors: | Dennis R. Moore Patricia Chamberlain Leona H. Mukai |
| |
Affiliation: | (1) OSLC, 220 East 11th Street, 97401 Eugene, Oregon |
| |
Abstract: | This study compared the follow-up incidence of court-recorded nonstatus offenses for three groups of adolescent children. These children had been seen 2 to 9 years earlier for problems with aggression in the home (N = 21), for stealing problems (N = 25), or for normative comparisons (N = 14). The results showed that 77% of the children with stealing problems had court-recorded offenses. This was significantly higher than the aggressive children, whose rate did not differ from the normative sample. These findings suggested that young aggressive children were not at risk for adolescent court contact. Instead, it was the young child with identified stealing problems who was highly likely to become an official delinquent. It also appeared that parental reports of stealing events constituted a predictive measure of later criminal acts. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 SpringerLink 等数据库收录! |
|