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Jesse Cale

Researcher at Griffith University

Publications -  67
Citations -  890

Jesse Cale is an academic researcher from Griffith University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Poison control & Recidivism. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 60 publications receiving 718 citations. Previous affiliations of Jesse Cale include Simon Fraser University & University of the Fraser Valley.

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Criminal Trajectories of Adult Sex Offenders and the Age Effect: Examining the Dynamic Aspect of Offending in Adulthood

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined a set of policies to manage the risk of repeat sex offenders in the community, and found that these policies tend to target older repeat repeat offenders.
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Beyond sexual recidivism : a review of the sexual criminal career parameters of adult sex offenders

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors claim that measures of sexual recidivism provide a distorted view of the criminal activity of adult sex offenders and highlight the complexities of the sexual criminal career of adult offenders.
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Developmental Pathways of Deviance in Sexual Aggressors

TL;DR: In this article, behavioral antecedents of deviance in sexual aggressors and how they relate to sexual offending were investigated, and a structural equation modeling was employed to analyze the behavioral ante-cedents.
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Offense trajectories, the unfolding of sexual and non-sexual criminal activity, and sex offense characteristics of adolescent sex offenders

TL;DR: The results show distinct differences in the unfolding of sexual and non-sexual criminal activity along different offending trajectories of ASOs, and that these trajectories were differentially associated with the characteristics of the sexual offenses they committed.
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Heterogeneity in antisocial trajectories in youth of adult sexual aggressors of women: an examination of initiation, persistence, escalation, and aggravation.

TL;DR: The presence of antisocial trajectories in childhood and adolescence is examined using a sample of 209 convicted adult sexual aggressors of women and a dynamic classification procedure using cluster analyses yields five distinct antissocial trajectories which are compared using analysis of covariance on various parameters of criminal activity in adulthood.