Ch. 6 Juvenile Delinquency Flashcards
Classical School (Theory of Crime)
CLASSICAL SCHOOL Theory of Crime says that FREE WILL is the PRIMARY CAUSE of a CRIME.
- Unless they are being robbed of their free will (e.g. Being seriously mentally ill), people CHOOSE to commit criminal behavior.
Positivist School (Theory of Crime)
POSITIVIST SCHOOL Theory of Crime looks for influences BEYOND free will.
- People still choose to commit crime, but their choice is influenced by numerous predetermining factors. (e.g. social enviroment such as crime-ridden neighborhood or deviant peer group)
Juvenile Crime Facts
- The majority of crimes committed by juveniles are nonviolent
- Most juveniles age out of crime.
- Juvenile crimes are on average less serious.
- Juvenile crime has DECREASED since the 1990s.
- From a psychological perspective, there are two groups of juveniles:
- Those who continue offending well into their adult years.
- The group typically demonstrated problem behavior very early in their lives.
- Those who commit a one-time, very serious offense.
- This type of one-time offending is rare
- Those who continue offending well into their adult years.
- Approximately one-fifth of those arrested go to trial.
- Those sentenced to jail or prison are not representative of the “true” criminal population, because many true criminals go undetected and/or unpunished – as many as 86%.
- Most crime is nonviolent – drug abuse violations, driving under the influence, and larceny-theft.
- Juveniles as a group are responsible for a small percentage of arrests compared with adults, but they are arrested disproportionately compared with other age groups.
- Offenders under 18 begin in family court but can be moved to criminal court, where a jury, the media, and the public can be present.
- All States allow Juveniles to be tried as adults under certain conditions.
- Most serious offenders REDUCE their offending OVER TIME (especially when MONITORED after SHORT-TERM incarceration).
- Long-term incarceration is INEFFECTIVE at reducing RECIDIVISM.
- Even adolescents who have committed serious offenses are NOT necessarily on track for adult criminal careers.
- Drug use and abuse in EARLY adolescence (12-14) is associated with antisocial behavior. EXCESSIVE USE at all ages was also associated with antisocial behavior.
- Juveniles (ages 12 to 17) who regularly smoke cigarettes and drink alcohol are far more likely to use a variety of illicit drugs.
- Male juveniles arrested for the sale/manufacturing and possession of marijuana combined increased from 55.1 percent of the arrests of male juveniles in 1994 to 74 percent in 2003.
65% have a mental health issue
20% have a serious mental problem
Juvenile Delinquent <18
Child Delinquent 7-12, 2-3x more likely to commit serious and chronic offenses.
Pennsylvania Law – 10 years = minimum age to be adjudicated
15 years and older who commit crime with deadly weapon excluded form definition of delinquent act
Anyone charged with murder is automatically excluded from juvenile court regardless of age.
PA has disproportionate number of offenders under 18 and under 15.
Juvenile offenders were 10% of all arrests in IS, 7% of all homicides, 30% of all arson, 20%, robberies, 17% of sex offenses.
Repetitive offenders engage at an early age than one-time offenders.
in 2018, 728K juvenile arrests, 30% female, 30% younger than age 15.
Juvenile crime down Down 60% since the 1990s
Copycat or Contagion Effect
A tendency in some people to model or copy an activity portrayed in the entertainment or news media. It is similar to social learning. “Copycat followers” often seek similar widespread recognition and significance as the models.
Deterrent Effect
Opposite of copycat/contagion. Crimes are prevented because someone is discouraged from carrying them out as a result of the media report.
Frustration-Aggression Hypothesis
Aggression is the result of blocking or frustrating a person’s efforts to attain a goal– Frustration always precedes aggression, while frustration prompts a behavior that may or may not be aggressive, any aggressive behavior is the result of frustration, making frustration not sufficient, but a necessary condition for aggression
Status Offenses
STATUS OFFENSES are offenses commited by juviniles that are forbidden only due to their AGE – like underage drinking and skipping school.
- Not technically crimes.
Incorrigibility
INCORRIGIBILITY is when a juvenile is beyond the control of one’s parents or guardians
- This Is a STATUS OFFENSE – an offense only due to their age.
Definitions of Delinquency
- ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR includes more than just CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR (which is a legal definition) and is often used rather than CONDUCT DISORDER.
- STATUS OFFENSES are offenses only due to age (ex: Underage Drinking)
- YOUTHFUL OFFENDERS are older than 18 but younger than 21 or early 20s. This is a designation only in some states but it offers these individuals some leniency.
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CONDUCT DISORDER represents a group of behaviors characterized by habitual misbehavior, such as stealing, setting fires, running away from home, skipping school, destroying property, fighting, being cruel to animals and people, and frequently telling lies.
- Psychological definitions of delinquency usually include conduct disorder, antisocial behavior, externalizing disorder, or some form of mental disorder.
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CHILD DELINQUENTS are juveniles between ages 7 and 12, who have committed a delinquent act according to criminal law.
- Children younger than age 13 = about 9% of all juvenile arrests.
PINS and CHINS
PINS = Person In Need of Supervision
CHINS = Child In Need of Supervision
Gender Difference Facts
- BOYS far outnumber girls in most types of offending, but most particularly in violent offending.
- For BOYS, the greatest risk factor was the LACK of SELF CONTROL.
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RUNAWAY figures are about equal for girls and boys.
- But GIRLS are far more likely than boys to run away BECAUSE OF VICTIMIZATION in the home and ultimately to take up prostitution.
- GIRLS (among all juvenile arrests) accounted for 30% of total arrests, 18% of the violent crime, 38% of the property crime, and 45% of juvenile larceny-theft (shoplifting)
- Particularly for GIRLS, a history of violent victimization, in or outside the home, seems to haunt both juveniles and adults.
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92% of juvenile female offenders reported that they had been subjected to some form of emotional, physical, and/or sexual abuse in or outside the home.
- 25% reported they had been shot or stabbed one or more times.
- For GIRLS, the greatest risk factors were FAMILY DISRUPTION and PEER ANTISOCIAL behavior.
Moffitt’s Development Theory
MOFFITT’S DEVELOPMENTAL THEORY identified two developmental paths: Life-Course-Persistent (LCP) offenders and Adolescent-Limited (AL) Offenders.
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LIFE-COURSE PERSISTENT OFFENDERS (LCP) are children who begin a lifelong pattern of delinquency and adult crime at a very early age, probably around age three or even younger.
- Continue their antisocial ways across all kinds of conditions and situations.
- Gets WORSE as they get older
- Show ELEVATED AGGRESSIVE behavior and as a result, are REJECTED and avoided by childhood peers.
- Almost exclusively male (98%)
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ADOLESCENCE-LIMITED OFFENDERS (AL) begin offending during their adolescent years and generally stop offending somewhere around their 18th birthday.
- The GREAT MAJORITY of juvenile offenders follow this path.
- The frequency and violence level of offending during the teen years may be as high as that of the LCP youth.
- AL Offenses tend to SYMBOLIZE ADULT PRIVILEGE (Drug and Alcohol offenses) and demonstrate autonomy from parental control (runaway and truancy). They are also likely to be crimes that SEEK PROFIT (theft).
- IN CONTRAST to LCP, AL children have learned to get along with others.
- AL children also have satisfactory academic, social, and interpersonal skills, which allows them to take a new path as they grow into adults.
Steinberg’s Dual System Model
STEINBERG’S DUAL SYSTEMS MODEL (of RISK TAKING) says that the adolescent brain matures along two different paths: a COGNITIVE and a SOCIOEMOTIVE one. Adolescents reach peak logical reasoning (the cognitive brain) at approximately age 16, while not reaching their psychosocial maturity (the socioemotional) until as late as 25 years old. This MATURITY GAP creates an environment of EXCESSIVE RISK-TAKING during adolescents.
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COGNITIVE CONTROL SYSTEM – The cognitive control system is found mainly in the prefrontal and parietal regions of the brain and is involved in logical reasoning, understanding, and learning.
- Matures at about 16 years old
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SOCIOEMOTIVE CONTROL SYSTEM – The socioemotional system is located in the limbic system and the midbrain areas, including the amygdala, and is a processing center for reward-seeking, social information, and emotional reactions that are more sensitive and easily aroused during puberty.
- Matures much later – around 25 years old
Coercion Developmental Theory
Keywords: Like Moffitt’s Theory but BLAMES the PARENTS
COERCION DEVELOPMENTAL THEORY is VERY SIMILAR to Moffitt’s Developmental Theory with ONE KEY DIFFERENCE. Both theories see two trajectories to adolescent offending, but COERCION THEORY blames the PARENTS while MOFFIT focuses on the specific characteristics of the child.
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Patterson’s COERCION THEORY identifies TWO TRAJECTORIES:
- EARLY ONSET (like MOFFITT’s LCP), which starts early and continues into adulthood. Worse than LATE ONSET and caused by the MOST SEVERELY INEPT PARENTING.
- LATE ONSET (like MOFFITT’s AL), which starts in adolescence and stops at the end of adolescence. INEPT PARENTING is still the cause of this, but it is LESS SEVERE than that involved with EARLY ONSET.
- Says that POOR PARENTING (poor parental monitoring of child activities, disruptive family transitions (e.g., divorce), and inconsistent parental discipline) are major psychosocial contributors to early-onset delinquency.
- Antisocial behavior PROGRESSES from FAULTY PARENT-TODDLER INTERACTIONS to similar interactions with teachers, peers, and others in the child’s environment.
- The coercive child (similar to the aggressive child who is characterized as an LCP in Moffitt’s theory) is then rejected by noncoercive peers, driving her to associate with peers who are similarly coercive, which contributes to the development of antisocial behavior.
- Says Gender Differences in aggression are established by age 5 and continue throughout life.
- Says that GIRLS display less antisocial behavior because they are LESS-FREQUENTLY involved in coercive parent-child interactions
- Unlike for boys, for girls, there are fewer highly antisocial, same-gender peers to model or with whom they can associate. So their antisocial behavior shows up only AFTER they begin to associate with BOYS (who provide much greater antisocial influence), which tends to be during adolescence.
Callous-Unemotional Trait Theory
CALLOUS-UNEMOTIONAL TRAIT THEORY (CU) says that some children and adolescents showed a LACK OF EMPATHIC CONCERN for others, LIMITED CAPACITY FOR GUILT, and POVERTY OF EMOTIONAL EXPRESSION – traits highly characteristic of behavioral patterns typically found in ADULT PSYCHOPATHS.
- CU individuals are NOT AFRAID OF BEING PUNISHED for their aggressive actions.
- They view AGGRESSION as an EFFECTIVE MEANS for dominating others.
- CU traits in childhood are predictive of lifelong serious, violent offending.
- Cruelty to animals was one of the indicators designating CU traits