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Loughran, Thomas A.; Brame, Robert; Fagan, Jeffrey; Piquero, Alex R.; Mulvey, Edward P.; Schubert, Carol A. – Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, 2015
How and why do many serious adolescent offenders stop offending while others continue to commit crimes? The Pathways to Desistance study, a multidisciplinary investigation that attempts to answer this question, followed more than 1,300 serious juvenile offenders for 7 years after their conviction. In this bulletin, the authors investigate the link…
Descriptors: At Risk Persons, Delinquency, Correlation, Sanctions
Piquero, Alex R.; Connell, Nadine M.; Piquero, Nicole Leeper; Farrington, David P.; Jennings, Wesley G. – Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 2013
The perpetration of bullying is a significant issue among researchers, policymakers, and the general public. Although researchers have examined the link between bullying and subsequent antisocial behavior, data and methodological limitations have hampered firm conclusions. This study uses longitudinal data from 411 males in the Cambridge Study in…
Descriptors: Risk, Adolescents, Bullying, Males
Piquero, Alex R.; Monahan, Kathryn C.; Glasheen, Cristie; Schubert, Carol A.; Mulvey, Edward P. – Crime & Delinquency, 2013
Much criminological research has used longitudinal data to assess change in offending over time. An important feature of some data sources is that they contain cross-sections of different aged individuals followed over successive time periods, thereby potentially conflating age and time. This article compares the substantive conclusions about the…
Descriptors: Crime, Longitudinal Studies, Risk, Regression (Statistics)
Higgins, George E.; Piquero, Nicole L.; Piquero, Alex R. – Youth & Society, 2011
The development of general strain theory (GST) has led to a renewed focus on the influence of negative life experiences on antisocial behavior. Although a number of studies have generated an impressive array of support for the theory, several avenues remain open for research. In this article, we examine how a specific noxious stimuli, peer…
Descriptors: Delinquency, Antisocial Behavior, Peer Relationship, Rejection (Psychology)
Shulman, Elizabeth P.; Cauffman, Elizabeth; Piquero, Alex R.; Fagan, Jeffrey – Developmental Psychology, 2011
The present study investigates the relation between moral disengagement--one's willingness to conditionally endorse transgressive behavior--and ongoing offending in a sample of adolescent male felony offenders (N = 1,169). In addition, the study attempts to rule out callous-unemotional traits as a third variable responsible for observed…
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Antisocial Behavior, Delinquency, Moral Values
Sweeten, Gary; Piquero, Alex R.; Steinberg, Laurence – Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 2013
Age is one of the most robust correlates of criminal behavior. Yet, explanations for this relationship are varied and conflicting. Developmental theories point to a multitude of sociological, psychological, and biological changes that occur during adolescence and adulthood. One prominent criminological perspective outlined by Gottfredson and…
Descriptors: Self Control, Socialization, Rewards, Psychology
Piquero, Alex R.; Farrington, David P.; Nagin, Daniel S.; Moffitt, Terrie E. – Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency, 2010
Researchers have hypothesized that over the life course, criminal offending varies with problems in other domains, including life failure and physical and mental health. To examine this issue, the authors use data from the Cambridge Study in Delinquent Development, a prospective longitudinal survey of 411 South London males first studied at age 8…
Descriptors: Antisocial Behavior, Males, Delinquency, Criminals
Gibson, Chris L.; Sullivan, Christopher J.; Jones, Shayne; Piquero, Alex R. – Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency, 2010
Although individuals low in self-control are more likely to engage in antisocial and criminal behavior, few studies have investigated its sources. Gottfredson and Hirschi argue that primary caregivers are largely responsible, whereas Wikstrom and Sampson contend that self-control is partially a function of neighborhood context. Using data from the…
Descriptors: Neighborhoods, Caregivers, Children, Self Control

Mazerolle, Paul; Piquero, Alex R.; Capowich, George E. – Youth & Society, 2003
Explored whether relationships between strain, anger, and deviant outcomes varied when using trait- or situational-based measures of anger, noting whether people with higher trait anger had increased likelihood of experiencing strain, becoming angry from strain, and responding deviantly. Relying on trait-based static indicators of anger was…
Descriptors: Anger, Antisocial Behavior, College Students, Crime
Piquero, Alex R.; Daigle, Leah E.; Gibson, Chris; Piquero, Nicole Leeper; Tibbetts, Stephen G. – Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency, 2007
Moffitt's developmental taxonomy of adolescence-limited and life-course-persistent offenders has received much empirical attention, with researchers focusing on the etiology and trajectory of offending between the two groups. Recently, Moffitt articulated a new hypothesis that has yet to be empirically assessed--that life-course-persistent…
Descriptors: Diseases, Health Behavior, Mental Health, Etiology
Piquero, Alex R.; Brezina, Timothy; Turner, Michael G. – Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency, 2005
An established finding in criminology is that most adolescents engage in delinquency. Still, studies continue to identify a small group of individuals who refrain from delinquency even when it is normative for their same-age peers. Moffitt's developmental taxonomy provides some reasons for delinquency abstention, but research has been slow to…
Descriptors: Individual Characteristics, Delinquency, Antisocial Behavior, Peer Relationship