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Anna Louise Stewart

Researcher at Griffith University

Publications -  83
Citations -  2248

Anna Louise Stewart is an academic researcher from Griffith University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Criminal justice & Poison control. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 80 publications receiving 2007 citations.

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Neuropsychological measures of executive function and antisocial behavior: A meta-analysis

TL;DR: In this article, a meta-analysis was performed to quantify the association between antisocial behavior (ASB) and performance on neuropsychological executive functioning (EF) measures, which indicated that a robust association exists between ASB and poor EF that held across studies with varied methodological approaches.
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Transitions and turning points: examining the links between child maltreatment and juvenile offending.

TL;DR: Trajectory analysis provides a useful analytical tool for understanding heterogeneous nature of child maltreatment and the impact of maltreatment on subsequent juvenile offending.
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Police responses to sexual assault complaints: the role of perpetrator/complainant intoxication.

TL;DR: Results indicated that the officers' perceptions of the complainant's intoxication level, as well as the gender of the officer, influenced officers' evaluations of the alleged sexual assault, and the more intoxicated the complainant was perceived to be, the more negatively she was viewed.
Journal Article

Pathways from Child Maltreatment to Juvenile Offending

TL;DR: For example, Stewart et al. as mentioned in this paper found that the frequency, severity and type of maltreatment increases the risk of children offending, while not all children who are maltreated offend, these results have important implications for the prevention of juvenile offending.
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Generative explanations of crime: using simulation to test criminological theory*

TL;DR: In this article, an ABM of residential burglary is presented, simulating a world inhabited by potential targets and offenders who behave according to the theoretical propositions of environmental criminology, and a series of simulated experiments examining the impact of these mechanisms on patterns of offending are performed.