Parent-child relationships of boys in different offending trajectories: a developmental perspective.

TitleParent-child relationships of boys in different offending trajectories: a developmental perspective.
Publication TypeJournal Article
AuthorsKeijsers, Loes, Rolf Loeber, Susan Branje, and Wim Meeus
PubMed ID22816682
PubMed Central IDPMC3519927
Grant ListR01 DA011018 / DA / NIDA NIH HHS / United States
R01 MH042529 / MH / NIMH NIH HHS / United States
R01 MH050778 / MH / NIMH NIH HHS / United States
R01 MH073841 / MH / NIMH NIH HHS / United States

BACKGROUND: This study tested the theoretical assumption that transformations of parent-child relationships in late childhood and adolescence would differ for boys following different offending trajectories.

METHODS: Using longitudinal multiinformant data of 503 boys (ages 7-19), we conducted Growth Mixture Modeling to extract offending trajectories. Developmental changes in child reports of parent-child joint activities and relationship quality were examined using Latent Growth Curves.

RESULTS: Five offending trajectories were found: non-offenders, moderate childhood offenders, adolescent-limited offenders, serious childhood offenders, and serious persistent offenders. Non-offenders reported high and stable levels of relationship quality between age 10 and 16. Adolescent-limited offenders reported a similarly high relationship quality as non-offenders at ages 7 and 10, but a lower and decreasing relationship quality in adolescence. Compared with non-offenders, serious persistent offenders reported poorer parent-child relationship quality at all ages, and a decreasing relationship quality in adolescence. Serious persistent offenders and adolescent-limited offenders reported similar levels and changes in parent-child relationship quality in adolescence. Although serious persistent offenders reported fewer joint activities at age 10 and 13 than non-offenders, a similar linear decrease in joint activities in early to middle adolescence was found for boys in each trajectory.

CONCLUSION: Developmental changes in parent-child relationship quality differ for different types of offenders. This finding has scientific and practical implications.

Title Parent-child relationships of boys in different offending trajectories: a developmental perspective.
Publication Title J Child Psychol Psychiatry
Publication Type Journal Article
Published Year 2012
Authors L. Keijsers; R. Loeber; S. Branje; W. Meeus
ISSN Number 1469-7610
PubMed ID 22816682
PubMed Central ID PMC3519927
Grant List
R01 DA011018 DA NIDA NIH HHS United States
R01 MH042529 MH NIMH NIH HHS United States
R01 MH050778 MH NIMH NIH HHS United States
R01 MH073841 MH NIMH NIH HHS United States

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