Life-course influences of poverty on violence and homicide: 30-year Brazilian birth cohort study

Author:

Murray Joseph12ORCID,Degli Esposti Michelle12,Loret de Mola Christian134,Martins Rafaela12,Smith Andrew D A C5,Moffitt Terrie E678,Heron Jon9,Miranda Vanessa Iribarrem10,Lima Natalia2,Horta Bernardo L2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Human Development and Violence Research Centre, Federal University of Pelotas , Pelotas, Brazil

2. Postgraduate Program in Epidemiology, Federal University of Pelotas , Pelotas, Brazil

3. Postgraduate Program in Public Health, Federal University of Rio Grande , Rio Grande, Brazil

4. Universidad Científica del Sur , Lima, Peru

5. Mathematics and Statistics Research Group, University of the West of England , Bristol, UK

6. Psychology and Neuroscience, Duke University , Durham, NC, USA

7. Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, and Center for Genome and Computational Biology, Duke School of Medicine, Duke University , Durham, NC, USA

8. Social, Genetic and Developmental Psychiatry Centre, Institute of Psychiatry, King’s College London , London, UK

9. Population Health Science, Bristol Medical School , Bristol, UK

10. Postgraduate Program in Epidemiology, Universidade do Extremo Sul Catarinense , Criciúma, Brazil

Abstract

Abstract Background Homicide is the leading cause of death among young people in Latin America, one of the world’s most violent regions. Poverty is widely considered a key cause of violence, but theories suggest different effects of poverty, depending on when it is experienced in the life-course. Longitudinal studies of violence are scarce in Latin America, and very few prospective data are available worldwide to test different life-course influences on homicide. Methods In a prospective birth cohort study following 5914 children born in southern Brazil, we examined the role of poverty at birth, in early childhood, and in early adulthood on violence and homicide perpetration, in criminal records up to age 30 years. A novel Structured Life Course Modelling Approach was used to test competing life-course hypotheses about ‘sensitive periods’, ‘accumulation of risk’, and ‘downward mobility’ regarding the influence of poverty on violence and homicide. Results Cumulative poverty and poverty in early adulthood were the most important influences on violence and homicide perpetration. This supports the hypothesis that early adulthood is a sensitive period for the influence of poverty on lethal and non-lethal violence. Results were replicable using different definitions of poverty and an alternative outcome of self-reported fights. Conclusion Cumulative poverty from childhood to adulthood was an important driver of violence and homicide in this population. However, poverty experienced in early adulthood was especially influential, suggesting the importance of proximal mechanisms for violence in this context, such as unemployment, organized crime, drug trafficking, and ineffective policing and justice systems.

Funder

Wellcome Trust

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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