The utility of Moffitt’s developmental taxonomy in predicting being processed through the criminal justice system

Citation

Zhanibekov, Akynkozha Kalenovich; Burkitbekkyzy, Bakyt Sara; Tursunovna, Alayeva Gulnaz; Dulatovich, Karazhanov Malik; Alua, Muratova; & Beaver, Kevin M. (2024). The utility of Moffitt’s developmental taxonomy in predicting being processed through the criminal justice system. Journal of Crime and Justice. pp. 1-13

Abstract

Moffitt's (1993) developmental taxonomy has guided a great deal of research and has had a profound impact on the field of criminology. Much of this research has focused on her explanation of life-course-persistent offenders, wherein she argued that a combination of being reared in an adverse environment and having neuropsychological deficits would lead to lifelong offending. The current study used this explanation to extend tests of Moffitt's theory by examining whether the combination of childhood maltreatment and neuropsychological deficits would have application that moves beyond the prediction of life-course-persistent offending and was able to account for participants being processed through the criminal justice system. Analysis of data drawn from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health) revealed that childhood maltreatment and neuropsychological deficits were both independently associated with being arrested, being convicted, and being incarcerated, but that the interaction between these two measures was largely null in the prediction of the outcomes.

URL

https://doi.org/10.1080/0735648X.2024.2422505

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Journal of Crime and Justice

Author(s)

Zhanibekov, Akynkozha Kalenovich
Burkitbekkyzy, Bakyt Sara
Tursunovna, Alayeva Gulnaz
Dulatovich, Karazhanov Malik
Alua, Muratova
Beaver, Kevin M.

Year Published

2024

Pages

1-13

DOI

10.1080/0735648X.2024.2422505

Reference ID

10526