Pathways to—But Not Through? Revisiting the Trauma and Recidivism Relationship Among System-Involved Youth

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Abstract

Research has demonstrated that exposure to traumatic experiences in childhood and adolescence can result in adverse outcomes, including mental health concerns, school troubles, delinquency, and juvenile justice system involvement. The current study draws on a framework informed by feminist pathways and trauma theories to revisit the effect of traumatic experiences on recidivism two years following initial system contact. Data from a Midwestern juvenile court illustrated traumatic experiences are common pathways into the system but are not predictive of experiences through the system using general recidivism outcome measures. However, several other variables predicted youth receiving new petitions. The effects of race/ethnicity and age are more pronounced when the sample was disaggregated by referral unit (truancy vs. delinquency unit). We discuss different methodological and measurement factors to consider when examining the trauma-recidivism relationship.

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McKenna, N. C., & Anderson, V. R. (2024). Pathways to—But Not Through? Revisiting the Trauma and Recidivism Relationship Among System-Involved Youth. Youth Violence and Juvenile Justice, 22(4), 296–313. https://doi.org/10.1177/15412040241232896

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