NCJ Number
139361
Editor(s)
R D Peters,
R J McMahon,
V L Quinsey
Date Published
1992
Length
360 pages
Annotation
Fourteen papers by leading researchers and practitioners provide a life-span developmental perspective on aggressive and violent behaviors.
Abstract
Six papers examine issues in the development of aggression in young children and the progression of these behaviors to older children and adolescents. The first paper describes a developmental paradigm for aggressive conduct problems during the preschool years, followed by a discussion of prevention for developmental disparities in abused children. Other papers consider developmental changes in antisocial behavior, a social learning approach to working with children and adolescents to end the cycle of violence, intervention and prevention for bullying among school-children, and the facilitation of change in families with aggressive children and adolescents. The remaining eight chapters address violence in the adult life span. One chapter considers the clinical features and treatment of post-traumatic stress disorder, followed by a related chapter on the cognitive treatment of a crime-related post- traumatic stress disorder. Other papers focus on the use of the relapse prevention model with sex offenders, community risk management strategies with violent offenders, the reduction of violence in institutions, psychopathy and crime across the life span, and issues in elder abuse in Canada and the United States. Chapter references and a subject index