The neighborhood-family intersectionIndividual risk for crime is exacerbated in poor familial and neighborhood contexts: the contribution of low birth weight, family adversity, and neighborhood disadvantage to life course-persistent offending
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Cited by (12)
A little early risk goes a long bad way: Adverse childhood experiences and life-course offending in the Cambridge study
2017, Journal of Criminal JusticeCitation Excerpt :Future research should not only seek to address these limitations by using more complete ACE measures and diverse samples, but also should consider how an individual's positon within society may impact the effects of these protective factors. For instance, it would be interesting to assess if someone's neighborhood context impacts what factors have a substantial protective effect (e.g., Piquero, Moffitt, & Lawton, 2002). Further, it would also be worthwhile to investigate if other known offending risk factors such as delinquent peers interact with the protective factors among those that have ACEs to either increase or decrease the probability of offending.
Disentangling Operationalization's of Persistent Offending
2017, Journal of Criminal JusticeThe impact of low birth weight and maternal age on adulthood offending
2015, Journal of Criminal JusticeCitation Excerpt :These mixed findings, in addition to the limited follow-up periods, indicates that (1) further investigations of the relationship between LBW and offending later into adulthood are needed; and (2) conditions that may moderate the effects of the relationship between LBW and adult offending should be examined. Studies have shown that the effects of prenatal and perinatal factors, including LBW, on criminal behaviors may be moderated by environmental factors, such as disadvantaged and adverse family conditions (Piquero & Lawton, 2002; Piquero & Tibbetts, 1999; Turner, Hartman, & Bishop, 2007). It has been suggested that mother’s age at time of birth may also moderate the relationship between low birth weight and offspring offending (Chen et al., 2010).
Maternal age as a crucial factor between low birth weight and crime: Evidence from Taiwan's National Data - A research note
2010, Social Science ResearchCitation Excerpt :First, for the majority of observations, we do not find strong evidence for a correlation between LBW and criminal outcome, controlling for other variables. Second, although some researchers have proposed an interaction hypothesis accounting for the later development of offenses and pointing out the critical role of adverse familial environment (Tibbetts and Piquero 1999; Piquero and Lawton 2002), the LBW effect on crime in our analysis does not interact with either less-educated or out of wedlock mothers. Instead, we find the LBW effect on crime interacting with another factor – maternal age.
Biosocial studies of antisocial behavior: A systematic review of interactions between peri/prenatal complications, psychophysiological parameters, and social risk factors
2019, Aggression and Violent BehaviorCitation Excerpt :Studies that did and did not find support for biosocial interaction effects differed in two important ways. First, studies reporting significant biosocial interactions focused on delinquent behavior as outcome variable (Chen et al., 2010; Piquero & Lawton, 2002), whereas studies reporting insignificant results focused on conduct disorder (Kelly et al., 2001) and aggressive behavior (Buschgens et al., 2009). Thus, differences in behavioral outcomes may have influenced the significance of interaction effects.