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Validity and Reliability of the Violence Risk Scale-Youth Version in a Diverse Sample of Violent Young Offenders

NCJ Number
246637
Journal
Criminal Justice and Behavior Volume: 41 Issue: 1 Dated: January 2014 Pages: 114-138
Author(s)
Keira C. Stockdale; Mark E. Olver; Stephen C. P. Wong
Date Published
January 2014
Length
25 pages
Annotation

The Violence Risk Scale-Youth Version VRS-YV; S. Wong, Lewis, Stockdale, & Gordon, 2004-2011 is a risk assessment and treatment planning tool for youths designed to assess violence risk, identify dynamic risk factors or treatment targets, and evaluate changes in risk from treatment or other change agents.

Abstract

The Violence Risk Scale-Youth Version VRS-YV; S. Wong, Lewis, Stockdale, & Gordon, 2004-2011 is a risk assessment and treatment planning tool for youths designed to assess violence risk, identify dynamic risk factors or treatment targets, and evaluate changes in risk from treatment or other change agents. We examined the psychometric properties of the VRS-YV on a diverse sample of 147 young offenders. The tool demonstrated high internal consistency a = .90 and interrater reliability intraclass correlation coefficient ICC = .90. Exploratory factor analysis EFA identified three factors: Interpersonal Aggression, Antisocial Tendencies, and Family Problems. VRS-YV static, dynamic, and total scores significantly predicted violent and general recidivism, including youth and adult outcomes, with moderate to high accuracy area under the curve AUC = .65-.77; however, results varied among ethnic/cultural, gender, and developmental subgroups. The VRS-YV also demonstrated strong convergent validity with two well-established youth forensic assessment tools. Clinical implications of these findings and future research directions are discussed in this article. Abstract published by arrangement with Sage.

Publication Format
Article
Publication Type
Report (Study/Research)
Language
English
Country
United States of America