Differentiating Categories of Violent Adolescent Offending and the Associated Risks in Police and Youth Offending Service Records

Author:

Ashton Sally-Ann1ORCID,Valentine Michael2,Chan Bonnie2

Affiliation:

1. Edge Hill University, Ormskirk, UK

2. Merseyside Police, Liverpool, UK

Abstract

Historical risk assessment forms for a sample of 173 males with a history of violent offending and under supervision by Merseyside Youth Offending Services (YOS) were investigated. Subsequent arrest records were scrutinised in order to obtain a better understanding of the relationship of social and psychological risk factors to offending behavior. The mean age of the sample at the point of contact with YOS was 16.01 ( SD = 1.37) with a range between 12 and 18 years. Assault was associated with solo expressive offending, a history of domestic violence, low school attendance and an inability to control impulsivity and aggression. Robbery was associated instrumental and escalated violent offending, psychological disorders, and deviant groups, including family criminal involvement. Risk assessments by professionals and the young people indicated that substance misuse co-occurred with robbery. The findings suggest that solo offenders commit the majority of violent offences and that targeted interventions should distinguish between expressive and instrumental offending.

Funder

Merseyside Police Violence Reduction Partnership

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Applied Psychology,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Pathology and Forensic Medicine

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1. Acquisitive Offending;Pathways to Adolescent Male Violent Offending;2023-03-13

2. Sensation Seeking;Pathways to Adolescent Male Violent Offending;2023-03-13

3. Knife Crime;Pathways to Adolescent Male Violent Offending;2023-03-13

4. Expressive Violence;Pathways to Adolescent Male Violent Offending;2023-03-13

5. Adolescent Offending Profiles;Pathways to Adolescent Male Violent Offending;2023-03-13

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