Article(electronic)August 6, 2019

Prevention of Criminal Offending: The Intervening and Protective Effects of Education for Aggressive Youth

In: The British journal of criminology, Volume 60, Issue 3, p. 537-558

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Abstract

AbstractChildren from poor neighbourhoods showing early aggressive behaviour are at risk for criminal offending. The role of education as a mediator, neighbourhood disadvantage and aggression as moderators for criminal offending were examined in a lower-income, community sample (n = 3,521; 48% males), across a 40-year period from childhood to mid-adulthood. Educational attainment accounted for 15–59% of the effect from childhood risk factors. Aggression was found to be a moderator such that aggressive children with low education had the highest odds of criminal offending. A protective effect was found where aggressive children who managed to obtain more education had reduced odds of offending. Research conceptualizing education as a 'control' variable does not address its role in the processes leading to criminal offending.

Languages

English

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

ISSN: 1464-3529

DOI

10.1093/bjc/azz053

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