2009
DOI: 10.3138/cjccj.51.4.435
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The Offending Trajectories of Youthful Aboriginal Offenders

Abstract: Dans l'étude, on examine les trajectoires criminelles de jeunes autochtones assujettis à une ordonnance de probation au Manitoba, Canada, et on les compare à celles de jeunes probationnaires non autochtones. Selon les résultats des analyses de la croissance mixte obtenus avec les deux souséchantillons, un modèle de trajectoires latentes à deux groupes est la forme d'évolution développementale qui représente le mieux le comportement criminel à partir du début de l'adolescence jusqu'au milieu de l'âge adulte. Un… Show more

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Cited by 42 publications
(34 citation statements)
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References 40 publications
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“…While 12.7 % of Indigenous females are likely to populate one of these three serious offenders groups, only 6.4 % of non-Indigenous males and 1.5 % of non-Indigenous females are likely to populate any one of these three groups. This mirrors what we know about the influence of race/ethnicity on longitudinal offending patterns from US studies documenting the offending pathways of Blacks and Hispanics [51,63,82,101].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 66%
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“…While 12.7 % of Indigenous females are likely to populate one of these three serious offenders groups, only 6.4 % of non-Indigenous males and 1.5 % of non-Indigenous females are likely to populate any one of these three groups. This mirrors what we know about the influence of race/ethnicity on longitudinal offending patterns from US studies documenting the offending pathways of Blacks and Hispanics [51,63,82,101].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 66%
“…These results indicate that not only are Indigenous Australians more likely to offend, but when they do offend, they exhibit more chronic and serious offending patterns. This mirrors what we know about the relation between race/ethnicity and offending over the life course in US samples, particularly those focusing on differences between African Americans and Whites [32,82,101].…”
Section: Indigenous Status and Life Course Offending Patternsmentioning
confidence: 82%
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“…As Choi, Harachi, Gillmore, and Catalano (2005) observe: "substance abuse has been found to be associated with violence, delinquency, academic underachievement, and school problems" (p. 506). Research suggests that there is a particularly high rate of substance abuse among Aboriginal youth offenders (Rojas & Gretton, 2007;Yessine & Bonta, 2009) and that offending patterns seem to be affected by increased alcohol or drug use (Bonta, LaPrairie, & Wallace-Capretta, 1997). Furthermore, the presence of Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD) in the Aboriginal population is another individual risk factor that is highlighted by Rojas and Gretton (2007).…”
Section: Risk Factors Among Aboriginal Youthmentioning
confidence: 99%