(Chap 6) ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOUR AND JUVENILE DELINQUENCY

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ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOUR AND JUVENILE DELINQUENCY

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1
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Genetic factors for anti-social behvaiour

  •  Anti-social behaviour tends to run in families.

  • Genes influence 40-50% of the range of antisocial behaviour within a population and 60-65% of the range of aggressive antisocial acts.

  • Environmental influences, including family, friends and school, are involved in gene expression.

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Neurological factors for antisocial-behvaiour

Neurobiological deficits, particularly in the parts of the brain that control reactions to stress → explain why some children develop antisocial characteristics

3
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Social factors for antisocial-behviour

Early onset antisocial behaviour.

  • Starts before or around age 11 → chronic juvenile delinquency.

  • Interaction of factors ranging from microsystem to macrosystem influences.

  • This web of interacting influences begins to interweave in childhood → early onset of behaviour and persistence into adulthood

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Social factors for antisocial-behviour

Late-onset antisocial behaviour.

It starts after puberty → and is a milder and more temporary type.

• In response to the changes of adolescence.

• Lesser offences than early onset offences.

• Adolescents with an average family history.

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Social factors for antisocial-behviour

Economic circumstances of the family

  • Persistent economic deprivation → can undermine parenting by depriving the family of social capital.

  • Poor children → are more likely than others to commit antisocial acts.

  • If the family emerges from poverty during childhood → There is no greater likelihood of developing behavioural problems.

6
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Social factors.

Relationship with the peer group

  • Anti-social peer choice → most decisive factor.

    • Outreach to others with similar education, school achievement, adjustment, and prosocial or antisocial tendencies.

  • Antisocial adolescents → antisocial friends, and their dysfunctional behaviour increases when they associate.

  • Quality parenting during adolescence → discouragement of association with troubled adolescents and reduced likelihood of involvement in delinquent acts.