Juvenile recidivism: criminal propensity, social control and social learning theories

Date

2004

Authors

Watt, B.
Howells, K.
Delfabbro, P.

Editors

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Journal article

Citation

Psychiatry Psychology and Law, 2004; 11(1):141-153

Statement of Responsibility

Bruce Watt; Kevin Howells; Paul Delfabbro

Conference Name

Abstract

Juvenile delinquency is a common precursor to persistent and serious criminal behaviour in adulthood. However, many young offenders will cease offending by early adulthood. Identification of the causal factors that contribute to persistence and relinquishment in offending behaviour is essential for reducing future criminality. Risk assessment research with juvenile offenders identifies a range of significant individual and contextual factors that predict future delinquency. However, much of the research has been conducted without clear theoretical direction. Theoretical bases for risk prediction are essential in the development of effective assessment processes that accurately guide interventions with young offenders. This article reviews previous prediction studies of juvenile recidivism within the framework of criminal propensity, social control and social learning theories. The key variables for criminal propensity were age of onset, criminal history and various measures of self-control; for social control, family cohesion and academic achievement; and for social learning theory, antisocial attitudes and association with deviant peers were consistent predictors of recidivism. Such factors appear critical in assessment and treatment with young offenders.

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

Copyright © 2004 Australian Academic Press

Access Status

Rights

License

Grant ID

Call number

Persistent link to this record