Parental Divorce: A Protection from Later Delinquency for Maltreated Children

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    Abstract

    Family structure and maltreatment (abuse and neglect) have been identified as predictors of youth delinquency, although the relationship is not clear. This article furthers this research by studying a sample of maltreated children (n = 250) in one Midwest county, and through a multiple regression analysis of many risk factors, the study identified only one significant delinquency variable that made delinquency less likely—children who experience parental divorce. Some established risk factors were surprisingly found not to be predictive of later delinquency: minority race, one-parent families, youth substance abuse, recurrent maltreatment, and youth behind in academic grade level. Implications for the family studies and juvenile justice fields are set forth

    Original languageAmerican English
    JournalJournal of Divorce & Remarriage
    Volume50
    DOIs
    StatePublished - Aug 1 2009

    Keywords

    • divorce; abused children; crime; delinquent behavior; regression analysis; substance abuse; single parents; juvenile justice administration; delinquency; family; maltreatment

    Disciplines

    • Criminology
    • Family, Life Course, and Society
    • Social Control, Law, Crime, and Deviance
    • Social Work

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