Risk Factors PDF
Risk Factors PDF
Risk Factors PDF
by Michael Shader1
The juvenile justice field has spent much time and
(Farrington, 2000:1).
Michael Shader, Ph.D., is a Social Science Program Specialist in the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency
Preventions (OJJDPs) Research and Program Development Division.
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cumulative effect.
offending a certainty.
risk factor.
Protective Factor*
Individual
General offenses
Substance use
Being male
Aggression**
Hyperactivity
Problem (antisocial) behavior
Exposure to television
violence
Medical, physical problems
Low IQ
Antisocial attitudes, beliefs
Dishonesty**
General offenses
Restlessness
Difficulty concentrating**
Risk taking
Aggression**
Being male
Physical violence
Antisocial attitudes, beliefs
Crimes against persons
Problem (antisocial) behavior
Low IQ
Substance use
Family
Low socioeconomic
status/poverty
Antisocial parents
Poor parent-child relationship
Harsh, lax, or inconsistent
discipline
Broken home
Separation from parents
Other conditions
Abusive parents
Neglect
Warm, supportive
relationships with
parents or other adults
Parents positive
evaluation of peers
Parental monitoring
School
Commitment to school
Recognition for
involvement in
conventional activities
Peer group
Community
Individual-Level Factors
of nonoffenders.
Social Factors
1987).
Community Factors
likelihood of delinquency.
2001:89).
Conclusion
misbehaving.
delinquent acts.
References
services.
University Press.
pp. 211246.
Criminology 29(3):519529.
37(9):14771486.
Press.
www.surgeongeneral.gov/library/youthviolence.
16(2):101109.
Pollard, J.A., Hawkins, D., and Arthur, M.W. 1999.
Mercy, J.A., and OCarroll, P.W. 1998. New
3(4):285301.
Raine, A., Brennan, P., and Mednick, S.A. 1994.
Moffitt, T.E., Lynam, D., and Silva, P.A. 1994.
Orthopsychiatry 57(3):316331.
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104(4):614624.
Psychiatry 54(7):670676.
Heinemann.
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