Skip to content

The sustained impact of adolescent violence histories on early adulthood outcomes.

Author(s): Patricia Logan-Greene; Paula S. Nurius; Carole Hooven; Elaine A. Thompson

Publication: 2013. "Vict Offender" 8, 2 (April 1.): 231-252.

Identifier(s): PubMed ID: 23772203; PMCID: PMC3678967; ISSN: 1556-4886; Citation Key: 7476

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/15564886.2012.755139

Publication type: Journal Article

Access: Google Scholar | Tagged | XML

Abstract:

A history of victimization and violence perpetration are well-established risk factors that hamper positive development in early adulthood, yet their separate and overlapping effects are rarely examined simultaneously, confounding understanding of their relative impacts. This study follows a diverse sample of at-risk adolescents (N=570) into early adulthood, comparing roles and resources, stress and distress, and maladaptive behaviors for those with a history of no violence, victimization only, perpetration only, and both perpetration and victimization. Results demonstrate four distinctive profiles, although all violence-exposed youth report more problems in the three assessed domains relative to those with no violence histories. Implications for intervention are discussed.