A Life-Course View of the Development of Crime
Henry Ford College · Harvard University Press · +2 more institutions
Abstract
In this article, the authors present a life-course perspective on crime and a critique of the developmental criminology paradigm. Their fundamental argument is that persistent offending and desistance—or trajectories of crime—can be meaningfully understood within the same theoretical framework, namely, a revised agegraded theory of informal social control. The authors examine three major issues. First, they analyze data that undermine the idea that developmentally distinct groups of offenders can be explained by unique causal processes. Second, they revisit the concept of turning points from a time-varying view of key life events. Third, they stress the overlooked importance of human agency in the development…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 58.40
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 28
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Life course approach
- Agency (philosophy)
- Argument (complex analysis)
- Perspective (graphical)
- Criminology
- Sociology
- Human development (humanity)
- Psychology