Author:
FERGUSSON DAVID M.,HORWOOD L. JOHN
Abstract
This paper uses a latent class modeling approach to examine gender related variations in
offending trajectories from adolescence to young adulthood. This approach is applied to data
gathered over the course of a longitudinal study of 896 New Zealand children studied from birth
to age 21 years. The analysis identified five trajectory groups: a group of low-risk offenders, three
groups of adolescent-limited offenders who varied in the timing of the onset of offending (early,
intermediate, and late onset), and a group of chronic offenders. Identical offending trajectories
applied for males and females. However, probabilities of trajectory group membership varied with
gender, with females being more likely to exhibit low-risk or early onset adolescent-limited
offending and males later onset and chronic offending. Examination of social, family, and
individual factors associated with these trajectories suggested the presence of a series of common
etiological factors relating to family functioning and early adjustment that discriminated between
trajectory groups. These risk factors appeared to operate in a similar fashion for both males and
females. Implications of these findings for trajectory theories of offending are discussed.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Developmental and Educational Psychology
Cited by
225 articles.
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