NCJ Number
151432
Journal
Journal of the Child Welfare League of America Volume: 73 Issue: 5 Dated: special issue (September/October 1994) Pages: 639-655
Date Published
1994
Length
17 pages
Annotation
In exploring the assumption that child maltreatment is a major cause of juvenile delinquency, the authors conclude that existing research is inconclusive and flawed.
Abstract
Juvenile justice resources have been channeled into apprehending and processing youthful offenders, while relatively few funds have been spent on the research necessary to formulate a coherent strategy for solving the juvenile crime problem. Some research studies report a causal link between child abuse and juvenile dysfunction. Many of these studies, however, are characterized by methodological difficulties and are limited by their heavy reliance on self-report and retrospective data. The studies also suffer from definitional, sampling, and measurement dilemmas and a lack of comparison groups. Therefore, the authors conclude that child maltreatment is not necessarily a leading cause of juvenile delinquency, including violent juvenile crime. They believe that existing studies still contain the key elements of quality research on juvenile delinquency causes. These elements involve the use of matched control groups for comparison purposes, control for socioeconomic factors in study samples, separation of abuse categories (physical, emotional, and sexual), and separation of status offenses from other criminal offenses. 65 references