Crossroads in juvenile justice : The impact of initial processing decision on youth 5 years after first arrest
Journal article
Cauffman, Elizabeth, Beardslee, Jordan, Fine, Adam, Frick, Paul J. and Steinberg, Laurence. (2021). Crossroads in juvenile justice : The impact of initial processing decision on youth 5 years after first arrest. Development and Psychopathology. 33(2), pp. 700-713. https://doi.org/10.1017/S095457942000200X
Authors | Cauffman, Elizabeth, Beardslee, Jordan, Fine, Adam, Frick, Paul J. and Steinberg, Laurence |
---|---|
Abstract | The current study advances past research by studying the impact of juvenile justice decision making with a geographically and ethnically diverse sample (N = 1,216) of adolescent boys (ages 13–17 years) for the 5 years following their first arrest. Importantly, all youth in the study were arrested for an eligible offense of moderate severity (e.g., assault, theft) to evaluate whether the initial decision to formally (i.e., sentenced before a judge) or informally (i.e., diverted to community service) process the youth led to differences in outcomes. The current study also advanced past research by using a statistical approach that controlled for a host of potential preexisting vulnerabilities that could influence both the processing decision and the youth's outcomes. Our findings indicated that youth who were formally processed during adolescence were more likely to be re-arrested, more likely to be incarcerated, engaged in more violence, reported a greater affiliation with delinquent peers, reported lower school enrollment, were less likely to graduate high school within 5 years, reported less ability to suppress aggression, and had lower perceptions of opportunities than informally processed youth. Importantly, these findings were not moderated by the age of the youth at his first arrest or his race and ethnicity. These results have important implications for juvenile justice policy by indicating that formally processing youth not only is costly, but it can reduce public safety and reduce the adolescent's later potential contributions to society. |
Keywords | adolescence; diversion; inverse probability weighting; juvenile justice policy; processing decision; recidivism; risk-taking; social policy |
Year | 2021 |
Journal | Development and Psychopathology |
Journal citation | 33 (2), pp. 700-713 |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
ISSN | 1469-2198 |
Digital Object Identifier (DOI) | https://doi.org/10.1017/S095457942000200X |
Scopus EID | 2-s2.0-85105482864 |
Research or scholarly | Research |
Page range | 700-713 |
Publisher's version | License All rights reserved File Access Level Controlled |
Output status | Published |
Publication dates | |
Online | 06 May 2021 |
Publication process dates | |
Accepted | 22 Oct 2020 |
Deposited | 30 May 2022 |
https://acuresearchbank.acu.edu.au/item/8xx6x/crossroads-in-juvenile-justice-the-impact-of-initial-processing-decision-on-youth-5-years-after-first-arrest
Restricted files
Publisher's version
98
total views0
total downloads2
views this month0
downloads this month