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Journal Article

Citation

Logan-Greene P, Nurius PS, Hooven CL, Thompson EA. Child Adolesc. Soc. Work J. 2015; 32(3): 269-279.

Affiliation

University of Washington.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

26190900

PMCID

PMC4504846

Abstract

The connections between early maltreatment and later aggression are well established in the literature, however gaps remain in our understanding of developmental processes. This study investigates the cascading life course linkages between victimization experiences from childhood through early adulthood and later aggressive behavior. The diverse, at-risk sample is of particular importance to child and adolescent specialists, as it represents highly vulnerable youth accessible through conventional school settings. In addition to direct pathways from proximal life periods, path analysis revealed significant indirect mediated pathways through which earlier life victimization contributes to aggressive behaviors in later life periods as well as revictimization. Multivariate regressions support theorized cumulative effects of multi-form victimization as well as distinct contributions of victimization domains (emotional, witnessing, physical, property, and sexual) in explaining aggressive behavior. Consistent with theorizing about the developmental impact of early maltreatment, results bolster the importance of interrupting pathways from victimization to revictimization and later aggression.

FINDINGS are evaluated in light of implications for early identification and prevention programming.


Language: en

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