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Life-course perspective

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Life-course perspective Moffitt s Taxonomy Age-graded theory of crime Thornberry s Model Age-graded Theory Moffitt s taxonomy Many people behave antisocially ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Life-course perspective


1
Life-course perspective
  1. Moffitts Taxonomy
  2. Age-graded theory of crime
  3. Thornberrys Model

2
Age-graded Theory
8-9 years
15-24 years
45-55 years
3
Moffitts taxonomy
  • Many people behave antisocially, but their
    antisocial behavior is temporary and situational
    (common in among adolescents)
  • In contrast, the antisocial behavior of some
    people is very stable and persistent ( found
    among a small number of males whose behavior
    problems are also quite extreme
  • Moffitt suggests that juvenile delinquency
    conceals
  • two qualitatively distinct categories of
    individuals, each in need of its own distinct
    theoretical explanation

4
Life-Course-Persistent Antisocial Behavior
  • Across the life course, these individuals exhibit
    changing manifestations of antisocial behavior
    biting and hitting at age 4, shoplifting and
    truancy at age 10, selling drugs and stealing
    cars at age 16, robbery and rape at age 22, and
    fraud and child abuse at age 30.
  • The underlying disposition remains the same, but
    its expression changes form as new social
    opportunities arise at different points in
    development.

5
Etiology of Life-Course-Persistent Antisocial
Behavior
  • If some individuals' antisocial behavior is
    stable from preschool to adulthood as the data
    imply, then investigators are compelled to look
    for its roots early in life, in factors that are
    present before or soon after birth
  • Neuropsychological variations in the fetal brain
  • Neural development may be disrupted by maternal
    drug abuse, poor prenatal nutrition, or pre or
    postnatal exposure to toxic agents

6
Etiology of Life-Course-Persistent Antisocial
Behavior
  • After birth, neural development may be disrupted
    by neonatal deprivation of nutrition, injuries,
    child abuse
  • Two sorts of deficits are empirically associated
    with antisocial behavior verbal and "executive"
    functions
  • The verbal deficits affect receptive listening
    and reading, problem solving, expressive speech
    and writing, and memory.
  • Executive deficits affect inattention and
    impulsivity.

7
Child-environment co-variation
  • Unfortunately, children with cognitive and
    temperamental disadvantages are not generally
    born into supportive environments
  • Indeed, because some characteristics of parents
    and children tend to be correlated, parents of
    children who are at risk for antisocial behavior
    often inadvertently provide their children with
    criminogenic environments

8
Problem child-problem parent interactions
  • Children with neuropsychological problems evoke a
    challenge to even the most resourceful, loving,
    and patient families
  • Numerous studies have shown that a toddler's
    problem behaviors may affect the parents'
    disciplinary strategies as well as subsequent
    interactions with adults and peers

9
Problem child-problem parent interactions
  • Over time parent of difficult toddlers reduce
    their efforts to actively guide and direct their
    children's behavior and become increasingly less
    involved in the teaching process

10
Maintenance and Elaboration Over the Life Course
  • Children with poor self-control and aggressive
    behavior are often rejected by peers and adults
  • In turn, children who have learned to expect
    rejection are likely in later settings to
    withdraw or strike out preemptively, precluding
    opportunities to affiliate with pro-social peers

11
Maintenance and Elaboration Over the Life Course
  • Behavior problems at school and failure to attain
    basic math and reading skills place a limit on
    the variety of job skills
  • Teenaged parenthood, addiction to drugs or
    alcohol, school dropout, patchy work histories,
    and time spent incarcerated are snares that
    diminish the probabilities of later success

12
Maintenance and Elaboration Over the Life Course
  • Similarly, labels accrued early in life can
    foreclose later opportunities an early arrest
    record or a "bad" reputation may rule out
    lucrative jobs, higher education, or an
    advantageous marriage
  • In short, the behavior of life-course-persistent
    antisocial persons is increasingly maintained and
    supported by narrowing options for conventional
    behavior.

13
LATENT TRAIT THEORY
  • Master Trait Personal attributes present at
    birth or established early in life, and it
    remains stable over time, i.e., personality,
    intelligence, and genetic traits
  • Personal traits do not change
  • Criminal opportunities change
  • Maturity brings less opportunity
  • Early social control and proper parenting can
    reduce criminal propensity

14
Adolescence-Limited Antisocial Behavior
  • Compared with the life-course-persistent type,
    adolescence-limited delinquents show relatively
    little continuity in their antisocial behavior

15
Beginnings Motivation, Mimicry, and Reinforcement
  • Social mimicry
  • Healthy adolescents are capable of noticing that
    life-course- persistent youths are able to obtain
    possessions by theft or vice that are otherwise
    inaccessible to teens who have no independent
    incomes (e.g., cars, clothes, drugs, or entry
    into adults-only leisure settings).
  • Life-course-persistent boys are more sexually
    experienced and have already initiated
    relationships with the opposite sex.
  • Life-course-persistent boys appear relatively
    free of their families they seem to go their own
    way, making their own rules.
  • Viewed from within contemporary adolescent
    culture, the antisocial precocity of
    life-course-persistent youths becomes a coveted
    social asset

16
Reinforcement
  • For teens who become adolescence-limited
    delinquents, antisocial behavior is an effective
    means of knifing-off childhood apron strings and
    of proving that they can act independently to
    conquer new challenges (Erikson, 1960).
  • Every curfew violated, car stolen, drug taken,
    and baby conceived is a statement of personal
    independence and thus a reinforcer for delinquent
    involvement

17
Desistence From Crime Adolescence-Limited
  • The availability of alternatives to crime may
    explain why some adolescence-limited delinquents
    desist later than others
  • At the crossroads of young adulthood,
    adolescence-limited and life-course-persistent
    delinquents go different ways.
  • This happens because the developmental histories
    and personal traits of adolescence-limited allow
    them the option of exploring new life pathways

18
Age-graded life course theory
  • The age-graded life course was introduced by
    Robert Sampson and John Laub in the early 90s
  • This theory attempts to explain the trajectories
    and transitions of criminal behavior over the
    life course
  • Trajectories are pathways or lines of development
    over the life span such as work life, marriage,
    parenthood, self-esteem, and criminal behavior

19
Transitions
  • Transitions are marked by specific life events
    (e.g. first job or first marriage) that are
    embedded in trajectories and evolve over short
    time spans. (Sampson and Laub 1992)

20
The life-course perspective
  • The life-course perspective focuses on the role
    that stability and change in behavior play in
    development over the life-course
  • Life-course theory implies there is a connection
    from childhood into adulthood and transitions or
    turning points can redirect the life-course

21
Life course theory
Life is a dynamic process. As people travel
through the life course they are bombarded by
changing perceptions and experiences and as a
result their behavior will change directions
(sometimes for better and sometimes for worse)
22
Life course theory
23
Age-graded theory of crime
  • Certain life events allow previously deviant
    youth to give up a life of crime
  • Childhood delinquency is linked to adult crime,
    alcohol abuse, general deviance, economic
    dependency, educational failure, unemployment,
    divorce, and even charges in the military
  • Despite this continuity, job stability and strong
    marital attachment in adulthood inhibit adult
    criminal and deviant behavior

24
Age-graded theory of crime
  • Sampson and Laub identify two transitions (career
    and marriage) that decrease or even eliminate
    recidivism

25
Age-Graded Life-Course Theory
26
Role of career
  • Work is important - because workers are likely to
    experience close and frequent contact with
    conventional others and the informal social
    controls of the workplace encourage conformity
  • At-risk youth can turn away from crime and lead
    normal non-criminal lives if they can maintain
    steady employment

27
Role of Marriage
  • Marriage creates positive social bonds and builds
    trust
  • Successful marriages have been shown to in crease
    stature and self-worth while promoting conformity
    to societal norms/roles
  • (1990) Mark Warr states For many individuals,
    it seems, marriage marks a transition from heavy
    peer involvement to a preoccupation with ones
    spouse. That transition is likely to reduce
    interaction with former friends and accomplices
    and thereby reduce the opportunities as well as
    the motivation to engage in crime

28
Empirical Support
  • Christopher Uggen completed a study to test
    Sampson and Laubs age-graded theory on the
    effects of employment and recidivism
  • The study examined over 3,000 people with an
    official arrest history drawn from nine U.S.
    cities and they were randomly assigned to the
    control or treatment program
  • Those in the treatment group were offered minimum
    wage jobs
  • Members of both groups reported work, crime, and
    arrest information at nine-month intervals for up
    to three years. (Uggen 2000)

29
Empirical Support
  • The findings show that those that were given jobs
    had a slightly lower rate of recidivism then
    those in the control
  • When examining the treatment group by age the
    over 27 group showed the lowest rate of
    recidivism
  • The findings of Uggens study give validation and
    cast doubt onto Sampson and Laubs theory
  • Uggens study does show that there is a
    relationship to employment and recidivism however
    it does not show the early life affect that
    Sampson and Laub would lead a reader to believe

30
Interactional Theory
  • Terence Thornberry (1987)
  • Interactions are very important in shaping the
    behavior
  • Attachment to parents, peers, social institutions
    change over time
  • Further, delinquents not only are influenced by
    their social surroundings but also have an impact
    on others through their behavior

31
Thornberrys Model
  • Interactive or reciprocal
  • The base for the model came from control theory
    and social learning theory
  • Fundamental cause of delinquency lies in the
    weakening of social constrains over the conduct
    of the individuals
  • Next step is association with delinquent peers
  • This association foster delinquent values and
    delinquent behavior

32
Thornberrys Model
1
3
Weak parental attachment
Delinquent association
Delinquent behavior
2
4
5
6
This model answers the contradiction between
Social Learning theory and Control theory about
what goes first deviant behavior or association
with delinquent peers.
33
Thornberrys Model
  • Interactional process creates a behavioral
    trajectory that predicts increasing involvement
    in delinquency and crime
  • Initial weak bonds lead to high delinquency, the
    high delinquency further weakens the conventional
    bonds
  • Combination of these effects make it difficult to
    reestablish bonds to conventional society at
    later age

34
Thornberrys Model
  • What about effect of employment, college,
    military, and marriage?
  • These variables play an important role in
    determining whether delinquency will continue or
    desist
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