These studies are limited by the use of general population samples, cross-sectional data, and the failure to consider both the determinants of perceived age-at-death, as well as some of the mediating processes associated with the relationship between perceived age-at-death and offending. Results of the current study indicate that gender, race/ethnicity, and adverse neighborhood conditions influence the perceived age-at-death; this perception distinguishes between distinct trajectories of offending, and such perceptions also influence both perceived risks and perceived rewards as well as one's impulse control. (Publisher abstract modified)
Downloads
Similar Publications
- Ethnic Differences in Correlates of Suicidal Behavior Among Women Seeking Help for Intimate Partner Violence
- Beyond Reoffending and Rearrest: Expanding the Collateral Consequences of Formal Processing to Youth Homelessness
- Cumulative Disadvantage and the Role of Transportation in Community Supervision