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  • Can Systemic Interventions Designed to Reduce Reoffending by Youth also Reduce Their Victimization?

    Author(s)
    McKillop, N
    Brown, S
    Johnson, I
    Smallbone, S
    Ogilvie, JM
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Smallbone, Stephen W.
    McKillop, Nadine K.
    Ogilvie, James M.
    Year published
    2017
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    Previous research indicates considerable overlap between populations of boys who are victimized and boys who victimize others. This study was concerned with whether a systems-focused treatment program designed to address individual and systemic risk factors associated with the perpetration of sexual and violent crimes might also be successful in reducing boys’ victimization by others. Boys adjudicated for sexual offences who received ‘treatment as usual’ (TAU; n = 335) were compared with similarly adjudicated boys who completed the treatment program (n = 200) on their histories of contact with police either as offenders or ...
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    Previous research indicates considerable overlap between populations of boys who are victimized and boys who victimize others. This study was concerned with whether a systems-focused treatment program designed to address individual and systemic risk factors associated with the perpetration of sexual and violent crimes might also be successful in reducing boys’ victimization by others. Boys adjudicated for sexual offences who received ‘treatment as usual’ (TAU; n = 335) were compared with similarly adjudicated boys who completed the treatment program (n = 200) on their histories of contact with police either as offenders or victims. Despite their higher rates of pre-intervention victimization, the treatment group were victimized less frequently post-intervention than the TAU group. Continued offending was the strongest predictor of victimization post-intervention. These findings suggest that offending and victimization share common risk factors that may be addressed simultaneously within offence-focused treatment.
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    Journal Title
    Journal of Child & Adolescent Trauma
    Volume
    10
    Issue
    1
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1007/s40653-016-0123-y
    Subject
    Psychology
    Other psychology not elsewhere classified
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/338499
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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