Dhingra, Katie, Debowska, Agata, Sharratt, Kathryn, Hyland, Philip and Kola-Palmer, Susanna (2015) Psychopathy, Gang Membership, and Moral Disengagement among Juvenile Offenders. Journal of Criminal Psychology, 5 (1). pp. 13-24. ISSN 2009-3829
Abstract

Purpose: The aim of the current study was to investigate the impact of psychopathy factors and gang membership on moral disengagement while controlling for age, ethnicity, having run away from home, family member and/or friend arrests, substance misuse, parental physical fights, violence exposure (victimization and witnessing), and maternal warmth and hostility.
Design/methodology/approach: The research is based on data collected from serious juvenile offenders (N = 769) as part of the Pathways to Desistance Study.
Findings: Six independent variables made a unique statistically significant contribution to the model: gang membership, age, gender, violence exposure, and psychopathy Factors 1 and 2. Psychopathy Factor 1 was the strongest predictor of moral disengagement.
Originality/value: Results indicate that youth with heightened psychopathic traits make greater use of strategies to rationalize and justify their harmful behaviour against others. Implications in relation to theory and previous studies are discussed.

Information
Library
Documents
[thumbnail of Psychopathy_Gang_Membership_and_Moral_Disengagement_among_Juvenile_Offenders_A_Propensity_Score_Matching_Approach.pdf]
Preview
Psychopathy_Gang_Membership_and_Moral_Disengagement_among_Juvenile_Offenders_A_Propensity_Score_Matching_Approach.pdf - Accepted Version

Download (222kB) | Preview
Statistics

Downloads

Downloads per month over past year

Add to AnyAdd to TwitterAdd to FacebookAdd to LinkedinAdd to PinterestAdd to Email