The past 2 decades have witnessed an increase in dating violence awareness and research. As the field evolves, it is critical to examine the definition and measurement of adolescent dating violence. This article summarizes the behavioral measures of adolescent dating violence used in the field. Based on a review of the literature and federally funded studies, we identified 48 different measures. The most commonly used measures were the Conflict Tactics Scale–2, the Safe Dates Scale, and the Conflict in Adolescent Dating Relationship Inventory, which all examine aspects of psychological, physical, and sexual violence. Researchers also adapted or created their own measures. This article concludes with a discussion of developments for consideration as the field moves forward.
The relationship between victimization and offending has been shown
consistently across different samples, settings, and crime types. This study
uses data from the Pathways to Desistance Study to examine dual trajectories of
offending between the ages of 15 and 24 in a sample of male felony offenders.
The dual trajectory models demonstrate substantial convergence in victimization
and offending. And while there are sizable numbers of youth who continue to be
victimized, but desist or decrease in their offending behaviors, very few youth
continue to offend in the absence of continued victimization. This study also
proposes and tests three criminological theories that have been employed as
explanations for the victim-offender overlap – low self-control,
lifestyles/routine activities, and street-code attitudes. The logistic
regression results indicate that involvement in risky and/or unstructured,
unsupervised activities is a key correlate of the victim-offender overlap. The
strength of the relationship between routine activity variables and the
victim-offender overlap supports the provision of structured, supervised
activities for youth and young adults as a way of preventing future
victimization and offending, particularly among youth who have high exposure to
violence.
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