Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction
- 2 The Dunedin Multidisciplinary Health and Development Study
- 3 Sex differences in the amount of antisocial behaviour: dimensional measures
- 4 Sex differences in the prevalence of antisocial behaviour: categorical diagnostic measures
- 5 Sex differences in physical violence and sex similarities in partner abuse
- 6 Sex and the developmental stability of antisocial behaviour
- 7 Sex and the age of onset of delinquency and conduct disorder
- 8 Sex effects in risk predictors for antisocial behaviour: are males more vulnerable than females to risk factors for antisocial behaviour?
- 9 Sex effects in risk predictors for antisocial behaviour: are males exposed to more risk factors for antisocial behaviour?
- 10 Can sex differences in personality traits help to explain sex differences in antisocial behaviour?
- 11 Sex and comorbidity: are there sex differences in the co-occurrence of conduct disorder and other disorders?
- 12 Do girls who develop antisocial behaviour surmount a higher threshold of risk than their male counterparts?
- 13 Sex differences in the effects of antisocial behaviour on young adult outcomes
- 14 Sex, antisocial behaviour, and mating: mate selection and early childbearing
- 15 Evaluating the recommendation to relax the criteria for diagnosing conduct disorder in girls
- 16 Life-course persistent and adolescence-limited antisocial behaviour among males and females
- 17 Priorities for a research agenda
- References
- Index
7 - Sex and the age of onset of delinquency and conduct disorder
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction
- 2 The Dunedin Multidisciplinary Health and Development Study
- 3 Sex differences in the amount of antisocial behaviour: dimensional measures
- 4 Sex differences in the prevalence of antisocial behaviour: categorical diagnostic measures
- 5 Sex differences in physical violence and sex similarities in partner abuse
- 6 Sex and the developmental stability of antisocial behaviour
- 7 Sex and the age of onset of delinquency and conduct disorder
- 8 Sex effects in risk predictors for antisocial behaviour: are males more vulnerable than females to risk factors for antisocial behaviour?
- 9 Sex effects in risk predictors for antisocial behaviour: are males exposed to more risk factors for antisocial behaviour?
- 10 Can sex differences in personality traits help to explain sex differences in antisocial behaviour?
- 11 Sex and comorbidity: are there sex differences in the co-occurrence of conduct disorder and other disorders?
- 12 Do girls who develop antisocial behaviour surmount a higher threshold of risk than their male counterparts?
- 13 Sex differences in the effects of antisocial behaviour on young adult outcomes
- 14 Sex, antisocial behaviour, and mating: mate selection and early childbearing
- 15 Evaluating the recommendation to relax the criteria for diagnosing conduct disorder in girls
- 16 Life-course persistent and adolescence-limited antisocial behaviour among males and females
- 17 Priorities for a research agenda
- References
- Index
Summary
Of all the developmental parameters of antisocial behaviour, perhaps the most extensively studied has been the age at which it begins (LeBlanc and Loeber, 1998). An exhaustive review by Farrington and eight expert colleagues (Farrington, Loeber, Elliott, et al., 1990) precludes the need for us to review this large literature here. It can be summarised by the welldocumented observation that early onset of antisocial behaviour problems is the single best predictor of serious adult criminal outcomes. Despite the importance of age of onset for theory and prevention planning, we found no published systematic comparisons of sex differences in this important variable. Unpublished sex comparisons of onset are cited by Elliott (1994) who mentioned that fewer girls than boys initiated self-reported serious offending at every age, and by Weiner and Wolfgang (1989) who mentioned that more girls than boys were first registered by police before age 14. Because these reports are unpublished, and seem to conflict, this chapter compares the sexes on age of onset.
Sex comparisons of onset age are interesting because it is possible to make opposing predictions about what the results might be. On the one hand, if, as we have seen, girls compared to boys have less extreme antisocial behaviour, or less aetiological press toward antisocial behaviour, we might expect girls would show onset at older ages on average.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Sex Differences in Antisocial BehaviourConduct Disorder, Delinquency, and Violence in the Dunedin Longitudinal Study, pp. 81 - 89Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2001