Kim Young S, Lo Celia C
Eastern Michigan University, Ypsilanti, MI, USA
Texas Woman's University, Denton, TX, USA.
J Interpers Violence. 2016 Oct;31(16):2643-65. doi: 10.1177/0886260515580368. Epub 2015 Apr 16.
The present study investigates how adolescents' experiences of violent victimization exert short- and mid-term effects on their involvement in delinquency. The study compares and contrasts delinquency trajectories of youths whose experiences of violent victimization differ. A multilevel growth-curve modeling approach is applied to analyze data from five waves of the National Youth Survey. The results show that, although delinquency involvement increases as youths experience violent victimization, delinquency trajectories differ with the type of violent victimization, specifically, parental versus non-parental victimization. Violent victimization by parents produced a sharp initial decline in delinquency (short-term effect) followed by a rapid acceleration (mid-term effect). In turn, non-parental violence showed a stable trend over time. The findings have important implications for prevention and treatment services.
本研究探讨青少年遭受暴力侵害的经历如何对其犯罪行为产生短期和中期影响。该研究比较并对比了遭受暴力侵害经历不同的青少年的犯罪轨迹。采用多层次增长曲线建模方法来分析来自全国青年调查五轮的数据。结果表明,尽管随着青少年遭受暴力侵害,其犯罪行为会增加,但犯罪轨迹因暴力侵害的类型而异,具体而言,是父母实施的暴力侵害与非父母实施的暴力侵害。父母实施的暴力侵害会使犯罪行为在初期急剧下降(短期影响),随后迅速加速(中期影响)。相反,非父母实施的暴力随着时间推移呈现出稳定的趋势。这些研究结果对预防和治疗服务具有重要意义。