An examination of change in dynamic risk of offending over time among serious juvenile offenders Article

Mulvey, EP, Schubert, CA, Pitzer, L et al. (2016). An examination of change in dynamic risk of offending over time among serious juvenile offenders . JOURNAL OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE, 45 48-53. 10.1016/j.jcrimjus.2016.02.008

cited authors

  • Mulvey, EP; Schubert, CA; Pitzer, L; Hawes, S; Piquero, A; Cardwell, S

authors

abstract

  • Purpose We examine whether and how much risk/need indicators change over time in a sample of serious adolescent offenders and whether changes in risk are related to self-reported and official record reports of offending in the year following assessment. Methods Growth curve and multilevel mixed-effects models are used to examine change through age 18 in a sample of 1354 serious adolescent offenders participating in the Pathways to Desistance Study. Results Three primary findings emerge: 1) Compared to the baseline assessment, overall risk/need scores decrease over time. 2) Risk/need does not change in a uniform sequence across domains and time; the form and rate of change differ by domain. 3) Risk/need indicators were related to later offending, with more recent indicators being more powerful for predicting rearrest. Conclusions The findings provide empirical support for recent efforts to incorporate routine risk/need assessment into juvenile justice practice. Repeated assessments are likely to identify fluctuations in areas of risk/need that can be used to inform case management and intervention efforts, even for serious offenders.

publication date

  • February 2, 2016

published in

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

start page

  • 48

end page

  • 53

volume

  • 45