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New frontiers in criminal careers research, 2000-2011: A state-of-the-art review

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TLDR
The criminal career paradigm is a major research focus in criminology, and the current state-of-the-art review explicates research published between 2000 and 2011 as discussed by the authors.
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This article is published in Journal of Criminal Justice.The article was published on 2011-07-01. It has received 329 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Criminal justice.

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Trauma changes everything: examining the relationship between adverse childhood experiences and serious, violent and chronic juvenile offenders

TL;DR: Findings suggest that the ACE score could be used by practitioners as a first-line screening tool to identify children at risk of SVC offending before significant downstream wreckage occurs.
Journal ArticleDOI

It's time: A meta-analysis on the self-control-deviance link

TL;DR: In this article, a meta-analysis examines the link between self-control and measures of crime and deviance, taking stock of the empirical status of self control theory and focusing on work published between 2000 and 2010.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Relationship between Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) and Juvenile Offending Trajectories in a Juvenile Offender Sample

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the relationship between adverse childhood experiences for distinguishing offending patterns through late adolescence in a large sample of adjudicated juvenile offenders in the State of Florida, using a semi-parametric group-based method to identify different latent groups of official offending trajectories.
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Foundation for a temperament-based theory of antisocial behavior and criminal justice system involvement

TL;DR: In this paper, a state-of-the-art review incorporates theory and research from over 300 studies from developmental psychology, psychiatry, genetics, neuroscience, and criminology to introduce a temperament-based theory of antisocial conduct with criminal justice system implications.
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Violence and Externalizing Behavior Among Youth in the United States: Is There a Severe 5%?

TL;DR: This paper identified a severe group (4.7% of respondents) characterized by involvement in varied and intensive externalizing behaviors, greater internalizing, lower academic achievement, and less parental involvement.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Adolescence-limited and life-course-persistent antisocial behavior: A developmental taxonomy.

TL;DR: It is suggested that delinquency conceals 2 distinct categories of individuals, each with a unique natural history and etiology: a small group engages in antisocial behavior of 1 sort or another at every life stage, whereas a larger group is antisocial only during adolescence.
Journal Article

A general theory of crime.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the social consequences of low self-control in criminal events and individual propensities: age, gender, and race, as well as white-collar crime.
Journal ArticleDOI

Role of Genotype in the Cycle of Violence in Maltreated Children

TL;DR: In this paper, a large sample of male children from birth to adulthood was studied to determine why some children who are maltreated grow up to develop antisocial behavior, whereas others do not.
MonographDOI

Shared beginnings, divergent lives : delinquent boys to age 70

TL;DR: Laub and Sampson as mentioned in this paper analyzed newly collected data on crime and social development up to age 70 for 500 men who were remanded to reform school in the 1940s and found that men who desisted from crime were rooted in structural routines and had strong social ties to family and community.
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