Childhood Abuse and Criminal Behavior: Testing a General Strain Theory Model

Citation

Watts, Stephen J. & McNulty, Thomas L. (2013). Childhood Abuse and Criminal Behavior: Testing a General Strain Theory Model. Journal of Interpersonal Violence. vol. 28 (15) pp. 3023-3040

Abstract

This article draws on general strain theory (GST) to develop and test a model of the childhood abuse–crime relationship. Using data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (Add Health),1 we find that early childhood physical and sexual abuse are robust predictors of offending in adolescence, for the full sample and in equations disaggregated by gender. GST is partially supported in that the effects of childhood physical abuse on offending for both females and males are mediated by an index of depression symptoms, whereas the effect of sexual abuse among females appears to be mediated largely by closeness to mother. The effect of childhood sexual abuse among males, however, is more robust than among females and it persists despite controls for low self-control, ties to delinquent peers, school attachment, and closeness to mother. Theoretical implications of the findings are discussed.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0886260513488696

Notes

10.1177/0886260513488696

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Journal of Interpersonal Violence

Author(s)

Watts, Stephen J.
McNulty, Thomas L.

Year Published

2013

Volume Number

28

Issue Number

15

Pages

3023-3040

DOI

10.1177/0886260513488696

Reference ID

4545