LEADER 08475nam 2200481 450 001 9910502654903321 005 20220620211007.0 010 $a3-030-68429-6 035 $a(CKB)4100000012027355 035 $a(MiAaPQ)EBC6728974 035 $a(Au-PeEL)EBL6728974 035 $a(OCoLC)1268440863 035 $a(PPN)258056193 035 $a(EXLCZ)994100000012027355 100 $a20220620d2021 uy 0 101 0 $aeng 135 $aurcnu|||||||| 181 $ctxt$2rdacontent 182 $cc$2rdamedia 183 $acr$2rdacarrier 200 14$aThe development of antisocial behavior and Crime $ereplication with the Montreal cross sectional and longitudinal studies /$fMarc Le Blanc 210 1$aCham, Switzerland :$cSpringer,$d[2021] 210 4$d©2021 215 $a1 online resource (246 pages) 311 $a3-030-68428-8 320 $aIncludes bibliographical references and index. 327 $aIntro -- Foreword -- Preface -- List of Abbreviations by Categories and Synonyms -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- What Kind of Journey Will We Have? -- Beyond Crime, Toward Antisocial Behavior -- From an Epidemiological Perspective, Toward a Developmental View -- From Replication to Reproducibility, Toward Generalizability and Universality -- Contents -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- About the Author -- Chapter 1: The Constructs of Antisocial Behavior and Crime: A Measurement View -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Constructs of Antisocial Behavior -- 2.1 The Legal or Societal Construct of Antisocial Behavior -- 2.2 The Scientific Construct of Antisocial Behavior -- 3 The Measurement of Self-Reported Antisocial Behavior -- 3.1 The Spectrum of Antisocial Behaviors -- 3.2 The Metric Properties of the SRAB Scales -- 3.2.1 The Reliability of the SRAB Scales -- 3.2.2 The Validity of the SRAB Scales -- 4 A Test of the Heteromorphy of Antisocial Behavior Measures -- 5 The Empirical Structure of the Antisocial Behavior Construct -- 5.1 The Theoretical Model, What Do We Know? -- 5.2 A Test of the Antisocial Behavior Theoretical Model -- 5.3 The Generalization of the Antisocial Behavior Hierarchical Model -- 5.4 A Network View of the Patterns of Antisocial Behavior -- 6 Conclusion -- Chapter 2: Antisocial Behavior and Crime: An Epidemiological View -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Epidemiology of Official Antisocial Behavior and Crime Careers -- 2.1 The Official Offending Career -- 2.1.1 A Descriptive Statistic View -- 2.1.2 An Age-Crime Curve View -- Measurement Issues with Official Offending Data Sets -- The Shape of the Age-Crime Curve in the 1960 and 1980 Generations -- The Variations of the Age-Crime Curves by Delinquency Status, Genders, and Types of Offending -- 2.2 The Official Problem Behavior Career. 327 $a3 The Epidemiology of Self-Reported Antisocial Behavior -- 4 Conclusion -- 4.1 The Shape of the Age-Crime Curves -- 4.2 The Gender Gap -- 4.3 The Generation Gap -- 4.4 The Normative or Delinquent Status Gap -- 4.5 The Mix of Antisocial Behavior Gap -- Chapter 3: The Developmental Mechanisms of Antisocial Behavior and Crime, a Process View -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Mechanism of the Quantitative Changes in Antisocial Behavior and Crime: Activation-Deactivation -- 2.1 The Quantitative Changes During an Official Offending Career -- 2.2 The Quantitative Changes During a Self-Reported Antisocial Behavior Career -- 3 The Mechanism of Qualitative Changes in Antisocial Behavior and Crime: Aggravation-Deaggravation -- 3.1 Offenses Switching or Changes in Behavioral Mixes -- 3.2 Age at Onset-Offset Versus Seriousness -- 3.3 A Developmental Sequence or Pathway -- 3.4 The Qualitative Changes in Self-Reported Offending -- 3.5 The Qualitative Changes in Official Offense Mixes -- 3.5.1 The Sequence of Official Offense Mixes -- 3.5.2 The Uplifting and Downlifting of the Sequence of Official Offense Mixes -- 3.6 The Qualitative Changes in the Self-Reported Antisocial Behavior Mixes -- 3.6.1 The Sequence of Self-Reported Antisocial Behavior Mixes -- 3.6.2 The Uplifting and Downlifting on the Sequence of Self-Reported Antisocial Behavioral Mixes -- 4 Conclusion -- Chapter 4: The Antisocial Behavior and Crime Autodynamic, a System View -- 1 Introduction -- 2 System Functioning, Principles, and Empirical Explorations -- 2.1 Theoretical Developmental Axioms of System Action -- 2.2 The MTSFGCLS Empirical Explorations -- 3 The Crime System Autodynamic -- 3.1 A Global Look at the Crime System -- 3.2 A Longitudinal Look at the Crime System -- 4 The Antisocial Behavior System -- 5 Conclusion -- Chapter 5: A Course View of Antisocial Behavior and Crime -- 1 Introduction. 327 $a2 From Criminological Typologies to Behavioral Trajectories -- 2.1 The MTSFGCLS Typologies -- 2.2 The Loeber Pathways -- 2.3 The Cambridge Classification -- 2.4 The Moffitt Developmental Taxonomy -- 2.5 The Patterson Onset Trajectories -- 3 A Multilayered Trajectories Model of Antisocial Behavior and Crime -- 4 The MTSFGCLS Trajectories of Antisocial Behavior and Crime -- 4.1 The Official Crime Trajectories -- 4.1.1 The Number of Court Males and Shape of Micro-Trajectories -- 4.1.2 The Comparison of the G60 Trajectories with Other Long-Term Studies -- 4.1.3 The G60 Offending Trajectories by Types of Offenses -- 4.1.4 From a Meta-Trajectory to Micro-Courses Through Meso-Paths -- 4.2 The Self-Reported Official Crime Trajectories -- 4.3 The Self-Reported Antisocial Behavior Trajectories -- 4.3.1 The Self-Reported Antisocial Behavior Trajectories of the Court Males -- 4.3.2 The Females Self-Reported Antisocial Behavior Trajectories -- 5 Conclusion -- Chapter 6: Conclusion: A Journey from Exploration to Generalization and Formalization -- 1 How Should We Know About the Development of Antisocial Behavior? -- 1.1 The Future Research Design -- 1.2 Down the Road with Conceptualizations and Measurements -- 1.3 Future Replications -- 2 A Discursive and Axiomatic Theory of the Development of Antisocial Behavior -- 2.1 The Extrinsic Part of the Developmental Theory of Antisocial Behavior -- 2.1.1 Antisocial Behavior: Acts that Violate Social Norms and that Are Harmful to Others -- 2.1.2 The Antisocial Behaviors Manifest in Three Categories -- 2.1.3 The Career Developmental Parameters Are the Same for Official Crime and Self-Reported Antisocial Behavior (See Also Table 2.1) -- 2.2 The Intrinsic Content of the Developmental Theory of Female and Male Antisocial Behavior -- 2.2.1 A Gender Gap -- 2.2.2 A Normative Gap -- 2.2.3 A Generation Conundrum. 327 $a2.2.4 An Age-Antisocial Behavior Puzzle -- 2.2.5 The Developmental Mechanisms of Antisocial Behavior -- 2.2.6 Antisocial Behavior Is a Developmental System -- 2.2.7 The Life Course Trajectories of Antisocial Behavior -- Appendix A: The Baseline and Replication Samples of the Montréal Two Samples Four Generations Cross-Sectional and Longitudinal Studies -- The Origins of the MTSFGCLS -- The Baseline Samples of the 1970s -- The Replication Samples of the 1980s, 1990s, and 2000s -- Appendix B: The Measurement of Official and Self-Reported Antisocial Behavior and Crime -- Official Offenses and Problem Behaviors -- Self-Reported Crimes -- Self-Reported Antisocial Behaviors -- The Format of the Questions for Each Behavior -- The List of Antisocial Behaviors -- The Antisocial Behavior Scales -- Appendix C: Legal, Criminal Justice, and Sociological Changes in Québec from 1960 to 2000 -- Introduction -- C.2. Changes in the Québec Criminal and Delinquency Laws and Their Criminal Justice Systems -- C.3. Evolution of Juvenile and Adult Criminality Since 1960 -- C.4. Sociological Changes Over Five Decades in Québec and Montréal -- C.4.1 Demography -- C.4.3. Government -- C.4.4. Family -- C.4.5. Health -- C.4.6. Education -- C.4.7. Economy, Work, and Poverty -- C.4.8. Consumption -- C.5. Conclusion -- References -- Index. 606 $aCriminal behavior 606 $aDevelopmental psychology 615 0$aCriminal behavior. 615 0$aDevelopmental psychology. 676 $a364.3 700 $aLeBlanc$b Marc$f1943-$0868866 801 0$bMiAaPQ 801 1$bMiAaPQ 801 2$bMiAaPQ 906 $aBOOK 912 $a9910502654903321 996 $aThe Development of Antisocial Behavior and Crime$92554674 997 $aUNINA