Early Physical Abuse and Later Violent Delinquency: A Prospective Longitudinal Study:
Jennifer E. Lansford,Shari Miller-Johnson,Lisa J. Berlin,Kenneth A. Dodge,John E. Bates,Gregory S. Pettit +5 more
TL;DR: Analyses of covariance indicated that individuals who had been physically abused in the first 5 years of life were at greater risk for being arrested as juveniles for violent, nonviolent, and status offenses.
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Abstract: In this prospective longitudinal study of 574 children followed from age 5 to age 21, the authors examine the links between early physical abuse and violent delinquency and other socially relevant outcomes during late adolescence or early adulthood and the extent to which the child's race and gender moderate these links. Analyses of covariance indicated that individuals who had been physically abused in the first 5 years of life were at greater risk for being arrested as juveniles for violent, nonviolent, and status offenses. Moreover, physically abused youth were less likely to have graduated from high school and more likely to have been fired in the past year, to have been a teen parent, and to have been pregnant or impregnated someone in the past year while not married. These effects were more pronounced for African American than for European American youth and somewhat more pronounced for females than for males.
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Measuring Intrafamily Conflict and Violence: The Conflict Tactics (CT) Scales
TL;DR: The Conflict Tactics (CT) scales as discussed by the authors measure the use of reasoning, verbal aggression, and violence within the family in intra-family conflict and violence research, and the CT scales are designed for measuring the use qf Reasoning, VerbalAggression, and Violence within families.
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Four Factor Index of Social Status [1975]
A.B. Hollingshead
- 01 Jan 1975
TL;DR: This paper is a 23-page photocopy of an unpublished working paper, with appendix and references, based on a monograph published in “Sociology: Foundations of Sociology, 2nd Ed.” (2003).
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