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Chapter 9. Developmental Theories: Life Course and Latent Trait. Developmental Theories. Seek to identify, describe, and understand the development factors the explain the onset and continuation of a criminal career
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Chapter 9 Developmental Theories: Life Course and Latent Trait
Developmental Theories • Seek to identify, describe, and understand the development factors the explain the onset and continuation of a criminal career • Intertwining of personal factors, social factors, socialization factors, cognitive factors, and situational factors • Two distinct groups: • Life course theories • Latent trait theories
The Life Course View • The Glueck Research • Popularized the research on the life cycle of delinquent careers • “The deeper the roots of childhood maladjustment, the smaller the change of adult adjustment” • Family relations are paramount in terms of quality of discipline and emotional ties with parents
The Life Course View • The Glueck Research • Children most likely to be delinquent: • Low IQ’s • A background of mental disease, and • A powerful physique
The Life Course View • Life Course Concepts • Loeber & LeBlanc • Devoted time to the evolution of the criminal career • Attention should be given to how a criminal career unfolds • People may show a propensity of offend early in their lives
The Life Course View • Problem Behavior Syndrome • Criminal behavior is one of many antisocial behaviors that cluster together and typically involve family dysfunction, sexual and physical abuse, substance abuse, smoking, and precocious sexuality.
The Life Course View • Two distinct viewpoints: • Life course theories • Criminality is viewed as a dynamic process • Influenced by a multitude of: • Individual characteristics • Traits • Social Experiences
The Life Course View • Two distinct viewpoints: • Life course theories • Latent trait theories • Human development is controlled by a “master trait” • Master trait is present at birth or soon after
The Life Course View • Some people are incapable of maturing in a reasonable and timely fashion because of family, environmental and personal problems • The propensity to commit crime is neither stable nor constant • Life course theories are multidimensional • Suggesting criminality has multiple roots
The Life Course View Figure 9.1 Life Course and Latent Trait Theories
The Life Course View • Disruption promotes criminality • Disruptions in life’s major transitions • Can be destructive • Can promote criminality • People influenced by different factors as they mature • Negative life events can become cumulative
The Life Course View • Changing Life Influences • First • Family relations • Adolescence • School and peer relations • Adulthood • Vocational achievement • Marital relations
The Life Course View • Problem Behavior Syndrome • All varieties of criminal behavior may be part of a generalized PBS • Unemployment • Educational underachievement • School misconduct • Residing in high crime and disorganized areas • Exposure to racism and poverty • Personal problems such as suicide attempts, sensation seeking, early parenthood, accident-proneness, medical problems, mental disease, anxiety, and eating disorders
The Life Course View • Pathways to Crime • Loeber and associates identified 3 distinct pathways to a criminal career • Authority conflict: • Begins at an early age with stubborn behavior • Covert pathway: • Begins with minor underhanded behavior and leads to property damage • Overt pathway: • Escalates into aggressive acts and then to violence
The Life Course View Figure 9.2 Loeber’s Pathways to Crime
The Life Course View • Age of Onset/Continuity of Crime • Life course theory suggests criminal careers are planted early in life • May begin with truancy, cruelty to animals, lying, and theft • Some offenders peak at an early age, whereas others persist into adulthood
The Life Course View • Age of Onset/Continuity of Crime • Continuity and desistance: • Poor parental discipline and monitoring may be key to early criminality • Rejection by peers and academic failure sustains antisocial behavior
The Life Course View • Gender Similarities and Differences • Like boys, early onset girls continue to experience difficulties such as • Drug/alcohol use • Poor school adjustment • Mental health problems, and • A variety of relationship dysfunctions
The Life Course View • Gender Similarities and Differences • Early onset path for males results in: • Problems at work • Substance abuse • Early onset pathways for females are more likely to lead to: • Depression • A tendency to commit suicide
The Life Course View • Adolescent Limiteds and Life Course Persisters • Moffet • Most offenders are adolescent limited in that antisocial behavior peaks and then diminishes • A small group of offenders are persisters • Begin offending at an early age and continue into adulthood
The Life Course View • Adolescent Limiteds and Life Course Persisters • Early starters experience: • Poor parenting • Deviant behaviors • Involvement with delinquent groups
The Life Course View • Supporting Research • Recent research supports Moffit’s views • Early onset delinquents are influenced by individual traits • Low verbal ability • Hyperactivity, and • Negative personality traits • Community-level factors such as poverty and instability seem to have little effect on their behavior
Theories of the Criminal Life Course • The Social Development Model • Integration of social control, social learning, and structural theories • Weis, Catalano, Hawkins • Community-level risk factors contribute to criminality • Social control, disorganization, and opportunities • Prosocial bonds may inhibit antisocial behaviors • Attachment to conventional activities and beliefs • SDM-based interventions can help reduce delinquency and drug abuse
Theories of the Criminal Life Course • Sampson and Laub: Age-Graded Theory • Sampson & Laub identified “turning points” (critical events) that may enable an offender to desist from crime • Career and marriage are turning points • Social Capital: • Refers to positive relations with individuals and institutions, which support conventional behavior • People who maintain a successful marriage and become parents are more likely to mature out of crime
Theories of the Criminal Life Course Figure 9.3 Sampson and Laub’s Age-Graded Theory
Theories of the Criminal Life Course • Testing Age-Graded Theory • Indicators tend to support age-graded theory (i.e. employment) • Research suggests the greater the social capital, the more likely one will be insulated from crime
Theories of the Criminal Life Course • The Marriage Factor: • People who marry and become parents are most likely mature out of crime • Laub and Sampson are following up on the original research cohort of the Glueck’s • Recent research • Piquero, MacDonald, and Parker • Future research • Military, conforming to employment, etc.
Latent Trait View • Assumes some people have a personal attribute that controls their propensity to commit crime • The trait is either present at birth or established early in life • Propensity and opportunity to commit crime fluctuate over time
Latent Trait View • Crime and Human Nature • Wilson & Herrnstein’s human nature theory • Genetics, intelligence, and body build contribute to criminality • Biological and psychological traits influence crime choice and non-crime choices • Their work suggests the existence of an elusive trait that predisposes people to commit crime
Latent Trait Theories • General Theory of Crime (GTC) • Gottfredson & Hirschi modified social control theory and integrated concepts of biosocial, psychological, routine activities, and rational choice theories • GTC considers the offender and the criminal act as separate concepts • People commit crime when it promises rewards and they are predisposed to commit crime
Latent Trait Theories • General Theory of Crime (GTC) • Tendencies to commit crime is contingent on a person’s level of self-control • Root of poor self-control is traced to inadequate child-rearing practices • Gottfredson and Hirschi maintain the GTC explains all varieties of criminal behavior • Empirical evidence tends to support the GTC
Latent Trait Theories • The Act and the Offender • The criminal act and the criminal offender are separate concepts • Criminal Acts: • Illegal events that offenders engage in when seen as advantageous • Criminal Offenders: • People predisposed to commit crimes • But not robots
Latent Trait Theories Figure 9.4 Gottfredson and Hirschi’s General Theory of Crime
Latent Trait Theories • Impulsivity and Crime? • Self-Control • People with limited self-control: • Impulsive • Insensitive • Physical rather than mental • Risk-takers • Shortsighted • Nonverbal
Latent Trait Theories • Self-Control and Crime • All crime stems from a deficiency in self-control • Differences in gender, race, and ecology • Can be explained by differences in self-control • Explains all crimes
Latent Trait Theories • Support for GTC • Numerous studies • U.S. and Abroad • Relationship between impulsiveness and self-control and crime
Latent Trait Theories • Analyzing the General Theory of Crime • Some critics charge GTC is: • Tautological: • Crime and impulsive behavior • Different Classes of Criminals: • Research indicates offenders occupy more than one class and more than one factor may contribute to their criminality • Ecological/Individual Differences: • Fails to address individual and ecological patterns in crime rates
Latent Trait Theories • Analyzing the General Theory of Crime • Some critics charge GTC is: • Racial and Gender Differences: • Little evidence that males are more impulsive than females and overlooks racism and poverty issues • Moral Beliefs: • GTC ignores the moral concept of right and wrong • Peer Influence: • Negative influences of peers increases the likelihood of criminality rather than reducing it
Latent Trait Theories • Analyzing the General Theory of Crime • Some critics charge GTC is: • People Change: • Propensity to commit crime does change and it is not static as suggested by GTC • Modest Relationship: • Self control is modestly related to antisocial behavior • Cross Cultural Differences: • GTC may be weak in cross-national studies
Latent Trait Theories • Analyzing the General Theory of Crime • Some critics charge GTC is: • Misreads Human Nature: • GTC assumes people are selfish, self-serving, and hedonistic • Personality Disorder: • GTC ignores personality disorders
Evaluating Developmental Theories • Criminal Careers • Must be understood as a passage along which people travel • Factors affecting a criminal career may include • Structural factors • Income and status • Socialization factors • Family and peer relations
Evaluating Developmental Theories • Criminal Careers • Factors affecting a criminal career may include • Pyschological factors • Intelligence and personality • Opportunity factors • Free time, inadequate protection and a supply of easily stolen merchandise
Public Policy Implications of Developmental Theory • Policy Implications • Multi-systematic treatment efforts • Programs targeting those at high risk to improve their developmental skills • SMART (skills, mastery, and resistance training)