Juvenile Homicide: A Closer Examination of Childhood Maltreatment
by Johnson, Whitney Randoll, M.S.W., ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY, 2011, 88 pages; 1491190

Abstract:

The purpose of this study was to explore the relationship between childhood maltreatment and juvenile homicide offending. Specifically, this study compared a sample of maltreated male juvenile homicide offenders (N = 51) with non-maltreated male juvenile homicide offenders (N = 364) among the following areas: familial dysfunction and disorganization, mental health issues, academic functioning, prior delinquency, substance abuse and homicide-related crime characteristics. Data was obtained from the following aggregate sources: Supervision Risk Classification Instrument (SRCI), the State Attorney's Recommendation form (SAR), the Predisposition Report (PR), and the Massachusetts Juveniles Screening Instrument 2 (MAYSI-2). Chi square and t-tests were then utilized to compare the two groups and preform analyses. Maltreated male juvenile homicide offenders significantly differed from non-maltreated male juvenile homicide offenders in terms of familial dysfunction and disorganization, academic functioning, prior delinquency and homicide-related crime characteristics. As a result of these significant differences, tailored prevention and treatment efforts were discussed.

 
AdviserDominique Roe-Sepowitz
SchoolARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY
SourceMAI/ 49-05, p. , May 2011
Source TypeThesis
SubjectsSocial work; Criminology
Publication Number1491190
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