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Development of Offending

NCJ Number
162055
Journal
Criminal Justice and Behavior Volume: 23 Issue: 1 Dated: (March 1996) Pages: 12-24
Author(s)
R Loeber; M Stouthamer-Loeber
Date Published
1996
Length
13 pages
Annotation
This article briefly reviews some historical approaches to the development of offending over time and stresses the conceptualization of developmental criminology.
Abstract
The authors emphasize the study of within-individual changes in offending over time and the study of causal factors that may explain onset, escalation, de-escalation, and desistance in individual offending. In particular, they believe a better understanding of individual differences in criminal careers can help to explain why some young people become involved in delinquency only marginally and others more deeply and which groups of individuals start to desist in crime at a specific point in the life cycle. Developmental criminology is relevant to applied criminal justice for several reasons: (1) the formulation of developmental theories; (2) the study of individuals rather than variables; and (3) decisions about what behaviors to target for intervention and when to intervene. 37 references, 1 note, and 1 figure