“…The need for an improved understanding of the diversity in female juvenile offenders is made more imperative by recent observations in the US, UK, Canada, and especially Australia that the gender gap in juvenile violent offending has narrowed (Holmes, 2010;Kong & AuCoin, 2008;Snyder & Sickmund, 1999;Zahn et al, 2008). While there is a lack of agreement about the causes of these trends (Kruttschnitt, Gartner, & Hussemann, 2008), they have led to questions about the possibility of a change in the nature of female juvenile offending, or more specifically that females may be becoming more violent (Alder & Worrall, 2004). Perhaps most importantly, an understanding of the possible diversity among female offenders has implications for all stages of criminal justice intervention, whereas in the absence of evidence to the contrary, the tendency has been to treat female juvenile offenders as a homogenous group (Hoyt & Scherer, 1998;Odgers et al, 2007).…”