Gonzales Lauren, McNiel Dale E
Psychology Department, Adelphi University.
Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Francisco.
Law Hum Behav. 2019 Sep 9. doi: 10.1037/lhb0000349.
[Retraction notice: A retraction for this article was reported in Vol 43(6) of (see record 2019-75174-001). The following Online First article published on September 9, 2019, is being retracted: Gonzales, L., & McNiel, D. E. (2019). Correlates of gun violence by criminal justice-involved adolescents. Law and Human Behavior. Advance online publication. http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/lhb0000349. The statement on p. 4 of the article was incorrect. Information regarding gun violence was collected by self-report only and the dichotomized coding scheme did not reference official arrest records. This retraction is at the request of the authors. They have agreed to revise the manuscript and resubmit to the journal for potential acceptance after undergoing the peer-review process.] Objective: This study presents a prospective evaluation of the contribution of criminogenic factors, psychiatric symptomatology, and neighborhood-level factors to risk for gun violence by adolescents with criminal justice involvement.
We hypothesized (a) elevated psychiatric symptom clusters would be associated with increased risk for gun violence after accounting for criminogenic factors; and (b) neighborhood contextual variables would contribute independently to gun violence risk controlling for criminogenic and psychiatric factors.
Data were drawn from the Pathways to Desistance study (Mulvey et al., 2004), a previously collected, longitudinal evaluation of 1,354 adolescents with felony or weapons-based misdemeanor convictions. Participants were located in Arizona and Pennsylvania and aged 14-18 at baseline. The majority identified as male (86.4%) and Black (41.4%) or Hispanic (33.5%). Participants completed interviews at baseline and follow-up over 7 years. This study drew indicators of criminogenic factors, psychiatric factors, ratings of neighborhood context, and self-reported offending verified with criminal justice records. We used discrete time survival analysis to prospectively evaluate the contribution of independent variables to time to gun violence.
The presence of self-reported threat control override symptoms represented a 56% increase in risk controlling for demographic and criminogenic factors, odds ratio (OR) = 1.56, 95% CI [1.11, 2.18]. Ratings of higher neighborhood gun accessibility represented almost 2.5 times increased risk for gun violence controlling for demographic, criminogenic, and psychiatric factors, OR = 2.48, 95% CI [1.60, 3.85].
Results suggest that consideration of environmental and individual-level factors hold importance for management of community risk and public safety for adolescents with criminal justice involvement. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).
[撤回通知:本文的撤回情况已在《》第43卷第6期报道(见记录2019 - 75174 - 001)。以下于2019年9月9日在线优先发表的文章现予撤回:冈萨雷斯,L.,& 麦克尼尔,D. E.(2019)。涉及刑事司法的青少年枪支暴力的相关因素。《法律与人类行为》。在线优先发表。http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/lhb0000349。文章第4页的陈述有误。关于枪支暴力的信息仅通过自我报告收集,且二分编码方案未参考官方逮捕记录。此次撤回是应作者要求。他们已同意修改稿件并在经过同行评审后重新提交给该期刊以供可能的录用。] 目的:本研究对犯罪成因因素、精神症状学以及邻里层面因素对涉及刑事司法的青少年枪支暴力风险的贡献进行前瞻性评估。
我们假设(a)在考虑犯罪成因因素后,精神症状群升高与枪支暴力风险增加相关;以及(b)邻里环境变量在控制犯罪成因和精神因素后会独立地对枪支暴力风险产生影响。
数据取自“停止犯罪之路”研究(马尔维等人,2004),这是一项先前收集的对1354名有重罪或基于武器的轻罪定罪的青少年进行的纵向评估。参与者位于亚利桑那州和宾夕法尼亚州,基线年龄为14 - 18岁。大多数参与者为男性(86.4%),黑人(41.4%)或西班牙裔(33.5%)。参与者在基线和7年的随访中完成访谈。本研究提取了犯罪成因因素、精神因素、邻里环境评分以及经刑事司法记录核实的自我报告犯罪行为的指标。我们使用离散时间生存分析来前瞻性评估自变量对枪支暴力发生时间的贡献。
自我报告的威胁控制超控症状的存在表明,在控制人口统计学和犯罪成因因素后,风险增加了56%,优势比(OR) = 1.56,95%置信区间[1.11, 2.18]。邻里枪支可及性评分较高表明,在控制人口统计学、犯罪成因和精神因素后,枪支暴力风险几乎增加了2.5倍,OR = 2.48,95%置信区间[1.60, 3.85]。
结果表明,考虑环境和个体层面因素对于管理涉及刑事司法系统的青少年的社区风险和公共安全具有重要意义。(PsycINFO数据库记录(c)2019美国心理学会,保留所有权利)