T
Tony Ward
Researcher at Victoria University of Wellington
Publications - 403
Citations - 21683
Tony Ward is an academic researcher from Victoria University of Wellington. The author has contributed to research in topics: Poison control & Sex offense. The author has an hindex of 72, co-authored 392 publications receiving 20086 citations. Previous affiliations of Tony Ward include Victoria University, Australia & Ghent University.
Papers
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A Self-Regulation Model of the Sexual Offense Process:
TL;DR: In this paper, a self-regulatory model of the sexual offensive chain is proposed, based on the idea that there are three core offensive pathways: underregulation, misregulation, and intact regulation.
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A Descriptive Model of the Offense Process for Female Sexual Offenders
TL;DR: The authors developed a descriptive, offense process model of female sexual offending that incorporates male co-offender and group co- Offender influences and describes how these interact with vulnerability factors to generate femaleSexual offending.
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Culture and classification: The cross-cultural application of the Dsm-IV
Joanne Thakker,Tony Ward +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that the DSM-IV's underlying thesis of universality based on Western-delineated mental disorders is problematic and has limited cross-cultural applicability.
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The Management of Risk and the Design of Good Lives
TL;DR: In this article, the authors integrate the risk-nesd and good-life models of offender rehabilitation, and show how it is possible to capitalise on the strengths of the risk management perspecwve by locating or embedding it within a more constructive, strength-based capabilities approach.
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Intimacy, Loneliness, and Attachment Style in Sexual Offenders
Stephen M. Hudson,Tony Ward +1 more
TL;DR: This paper developed an attachment-based model that relates offending styles and interpersonal goals, and they have provided some preliminary evidence for it at the level of attachment style and offender type, and most of the attachment model's predictions were supported.