Understanding the Risk of Sexual Reoffending in Adult Men: A Network-Based Model

Author:

van den Berg Jan Willem12ORCID,van Beek Daan J.3,Bouman Yvonne H. A.1,Janssen Erick2,Smid Wineke J.4,Gijs Luk2

Affiliation:

1. Transfore, Outpatient Clinic De Tender, Deventer, the Netherlands

2. Institute for Family and Sexuality Studies, Department of Neurosciences, University of Leuven, Belgium

3. Private practice of clinical psychology, Utrecht, The Netherlands

4. Forensic Care Specialists, Utrecht, The Netherlands

Abstract

The predominant approach to understand dynamic risk factors of sexual reoffending has been referred to as the Propensities Model (Thornton, 2016). According to this model, dynamic risk factors can be conceptualized as latent constructs whose change alters the risk of sexual reoffending. Despite its strengths and contributions to research, this model does not offer answers to the question of how dynamic risk factors contribute to the risk of sexual reoffending, or of how sustained change in risk might take place. In this paper we introduce the Network-Based Model of Risk of Sexual Reoffending (NBM-RSR), which addresses several limitations and constraints of the Propensities Model and offers empirically testable propositions regarding the nature and development of the risk of sexual reoffending. The NBM-RSR considers risk of sexual reoffending to involve a self-sustaining network of causally connected dynamic risk factors. Consistent with this, an increased risk of sexual reoffending is characterized through a network that contains more and stronger interconnected dynamic risk factors with a higher strength. Sustained change in risk of sexual reoffending occurs when activity in the network exceeds a critical point resulting in a new self-sustaining network. Propositions based on the NBM-RSR are introduced and translated into testable hypotheses. These propositions revolve around (a) risk of sexual reoffending resulting from the construction of a network of causally connected dynamic risk factors, (b) network stability, sudden changes, and critical transitions, and (c) dynamic risk factors’ relative influence on risk of sexual reoffending.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,General Psychology

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