NCJ Number
233530
Editor(s)
Rolf Loeber,
David P. Farrington,
Magda Stouthamer-Loeber,
Helene Raskin White
Date Published
2008
Length
427 pages
Annotation
This compilation discusses the implications of the findings from the Pittsburgh Youth Study for current conceptualizations of antisocial behavior and combines the strengths of three disciplines to explain delinquency in young people: developmental psychopathology, criminology, and public health.
Abstract
In this work, top experts in the field of delinquency discuss the implications of the findings of the Pittsburgh Youth Study for current conceptualizations of antisocial behavior. The work is unique in that it combines the strengths of three disciplines to explain delinquency in young people: developmental psychopathology, criminology, and public health. The book addresses questions in two main areas: 1) serious offending as an outcome over time and developmental aspects of serious offending; and 2) factors which explain why some young males become violent and/or commit serious crime while others do not. The work is a resource for researchers, practitioners and students in developmental, school and counseling psychology; psychopathology, psychiatry, public health and criminology. Table of Contents - Part I: Introduction and Methods. 1) Introduction and Key Questions. 2) The Pittsburgh Youth Study: Its Design, Data Collection, and Early Key Findings. 3) Measurement Instruments and Constructs. Part II: 1) Epidemiology of Violence, Serious Theft, Substance Use, Drug Dealing and Gang Membership. 4) The Age-crime Curve in Reported Offending. 5) Comparing Arrests and Convictions with Reported Offending. 6) Substance Use, Drug Dealing, Gang Membership, and Gun Carrying and Their Predictive Associations with Serious Violence and Serious Theft. Part III: Prediction of Violence, Serious Theft and Desistance. 7) Promotive and Risk Processes at Different Life Stages. 8) Developmental Trajectories of Violence and Theft. 9) Desistance From and Persistence in Offending. Part IV: Conclusions. 10) Conclusions and Policy Implications. Work includes: Appendix: Publications from the Pittsburgh Youth Study; References; Index; Figures (67); and Tables (53).