Risk Factors For Violent or Chronically Serious Juvenile Offense Patterns
- A previous history of violence.
- Delinquent peer groups, connecting with anti-social groups, and/or gangs.
- Poverty and social inequity.
- High-crime neighborhoods.
- Prejudice and discrimination.
- Poor school performance (academically, socially, or behaviorally).
- Weak family attachments resulting in abandonment, alienation, and/or poor interpersonal bonding.
- Physical abuse and neglect promoting trauma syndromes that persist into adulthood.
- Family violence, including harsh and continual punishment.
- A lack of consistent discipline, which promotes rebellion, and a lack of boundaries.
- Living in an environment where violence is a preferred means of intervention.
- Deficits such as Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder, a learning disability, or a behavioral disability.
- Fearless, impulsive behaviors from childhood through adolescence.
- Access to firearms.
- Access to or dependency on illicit drugs or alcohol.
- Continual exposure to violence through the mass media or cultural means.
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