Childhood predictors of criminal offending: results from a 19-year longitudinal epidemiological study of boys

S Young, E Taylor… - Journal of Attention …, 2016 - journals.sagepub.com
Journal of Attention Disorders, 2016journals.sagepub.com
Objective: To examine the relative contribution of hyperactivity, conduct, and emotional
problems in predicting criminal offending. Method: In all, 173 boys aged 6 to 8 years
(assessed for hyperactivity, conduct, and emotional problems) were followed up 19 years
later by examining criminal offense histories. Results: Significant main effects for total and
violent convictions were found, the strongest being for violent criminal offenses. Conduct
problems predicted general offending (irrespective of the type of conviction), whereas …
Objective
To examine the relative contribution of hyperactivity, conduct, and emotional problems in predicting criminal offending.
Method
In all, 173 boys aged 6 to 8 years (assessed for hyperactivity, conduct, and emotional problems) were followed up 19 years later by examining criminal offense histories.
Results
Significant main effects for total and violent convictions were found, the strongest being for violent criminal offenses. Conduct problems predicted general offending (irrespective of the type of conviction), whereas emotional problems were the single best predictor of violent convictions. Hyperactivity was not a significant predictor in the models.
Conclusion
The findings provide insight into the developmental mechanisms that mediate criminal behavior by showing that childhood emotional problems independently contribute to the risk of violent offending in later life.
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