Adolescent Offending Flashcards

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1
Q

Adolescent offending

Key findings:
Age
Sex
Percentage of all offenders
Two types of adolescent offenders
Adult age in Qld
A

Age: 15-17yrs increase in levels of offending

Sex: Mostly male

Percentage: 13% of overall offenders

Types: adolescent limited + life course offenders

Age in Qld - 10-17 = juvenile, 18 = adult

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2
Q

Common offences

A
Theft
Assault
Illicit drugs
Public order offences
Vandalism

*mainly non-custodial offences

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3
Q

Life-course persistent offenders

A

Commit a wide range of offences

Very small group of offenders but account for the most crime

Those convicted earliest tend to become the most persistent offenders

Offend early and continue beyond 20years

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4
Q

Adolescent-limited offenders

A

Short criminal careers

Commit predominantly rebellious non-violent crimes

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5
Q

Risk and Protective factors - types

A

Individual
Family
Other macro levels (sociological), e.g. socioeconomic, school, peer, neighbourhood

  • risk/protective factors are cumulative
  • different factors matter at different time
  • increased number = increased likelihood
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6
Q

Individual risk factors

A
Low IQ
Low school achievement 
Hyperactivity 
Impulsiveness 
Risk taking 
Antisocial behaviour 
Neurological problems 
Perinatal difficulties

*risk/protective factors don’t exist on a continuum

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7
Q

Individual protective factors

A
Social competence
Social skills
Attachment to family
Moral beliefs 
Values
Good coping style
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8
Q

Family risk factors

A
Poor parental supervision 
Harsh/inconsistent discipline 
Cold parental attitude 
Parental conflict
Divorce/separation
Criminal parents
Delinquent siblings 
Parental substance abuse
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9
Q

Family protective factors

A

Caring parents
Family harmony
Small family

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10
Q

Macro risk factors:

Socioeconomic
Peer
School
Neighbourhood

A

Socioeconomic: low family income, poverty, large family, parents unemployed

Peer: delinquent peers, peer rejection, low popularity

School: bullying, high delinquency rate, poor community, under resourced, teacher-school

Neighbourhood: poverty, poor access to resources, high crime/violence, disorganised

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11
Q

Macro protective factors

School/peer
Neighbourhood

A

School/peer: protective school climate, pro social peer group, sense of attachment to school, school norms

Neighbourhood: access to support services, community networking, community/cultural norms against violence; high socioeconomic status

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12
Q

Antecedents to adolescent offending

A
Parenting related:
Punitive child rearing 
Absence of love/rejection 
Poor monitoring or supervision 
Family disruption 
Deviant parents
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13
Q

Theories of delinquency

A

Individual propensity approaches: consequence of individual factors
- e.g. theory of moral reasoning

Social interactionist approaches: social control + social learning theory, e.g. social development model, general age-graded theory of crime

An integrated factor approach: a pathways approach

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14
Q

Purpose of interventions

A

Selected and targeted programs have the greatest impact

Aim to change antisocial behaviours by targeting risk factors - not always aimed at reducing crime

Take place early in life at crucial transitions

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15
Q

Types of programs

A

Educational programs

Family support programs

Combined family support and early education

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16
Q

Elmira/parental early infancy project

A

Bi-weekly home nursing visits to young poor and single mums

Better parenting skills at age 4
Higher employment 
Fewer pregnancies 
Widely spaced pregnancies 
More mums returned to education 
Less abuse/neglect

Encouraged sense of control over lives. Increased involvement in child development and improved child health

17
Q

Perry Preschool Project

A
Higher school achievement 
Higher rates of literacy/emp
Less welfare dependency 
More likely to own home
Less antisocial behaviour 
Less offending - fewer arrests
Cost benefit $16.14 for every $1 spent
18
Q

Pathways to a Prevention Project

A

Griffith program
3 ethnic groups (indigenous, Pacific Islander, Vietnamese)
Preschool and family independence programs
Positive effect on reducing problem behaviour
Effect greatest for those in both programs (ie parents included)

19
Q

4 Diversionary options to prevent reoffending

A

1 no action
2 cautioning
3 youth justice conferencing
4 diversion

Considerations- offence committed, criminal history, past diversionary options

Results: victims positive, big drop in violent offending, small increase in drink driving, no difference in shop lifting (RISE program)