Psychopathic traits and recurring victimization: An examination using a community and clinical sample

Citation

Daigle, L. E. & Teasdale, B. (2018). Psychopathic traits and recurring victimization: An examination using a community and clinical sample. Criminal Justice and Behavior.

Abstract

Few studies have identified specific characteristics of recurrent victims that distinguish them from single victims. One such characteristic that may do so is possessing psychopathic traits, given that persons with psychopathic traits are generally risk-seeking, callous, short-tempered, and lack behavioral controls. To examine this possibility, we use data from both the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health) and the MacArthur Violence Risk Assessment Study (MacRisk). We find that in both samples, psychopathic traits are able to distinguish between nonvictims and recurring victims as well as single-wave victims and recurring victims. This finding holds great promise for identifying who may be at risk of experiencing recurring victimization, ways to reduce victimization risk, as well as potential additional avenues for research in this area.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1177%2F0093854818760966

Keyword(s)

psychopathic traits psychopathy replication revictimization victimization

Notes

Export Date: 4 April 2018 Article in Press

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Criminal Justice and Behavior

Author(s)

Daigle, L. E.
Teasdale, B.

Year Published

2018

Edition

March 1, 2018

DOI

10.1177/0093854818760966

Reference ID

8304