“…Given the potential importance of legal attitudes as risk factors for criminal and violent outcomes, researchers are increasingly interested in understanding how these attitudes develop over the life course (Fagan & Tyler, ; McLean, Wolfe, & Pratt, ; Tyler & Trinkner, ). Existing research findings indicate that legal attitudes, and in particular legal cynicism, are moderately stable but still changeable during adolescence and early adulthood (Fine & Cauffman, ; Nivette et al., ; Schuck, ; Stewart, Morris, & Weir, ). Few longitudinal studies, however, have been focused specifically on legal cynicism, and those that have distinguished between legal cynicism and police legitimacy have reported meaningful differences in the patterns and sources of change between outcomes (e.g., Fagan & Piquero, ; Fine & Cauffman, ; Kaiser & Reisig, ).…”