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Journal Article

Citation

Foster H, Hagan J, Brooks-Gunn J. Ann. N. Y. Acad. Sci. 2004; 1036: 151-166.

Affiliation

M University, Academic #422, 4351 TAMU, College Station 77843, TX, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2004, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1196/annals.1330.009

PMID

15817736

Abstract

This paper links sociological and epidemiologic research on violence and the life course to biosocial perspectives on pubertal maturation to examine risk factors associated with exposure to intimate partner violence in adolescence. While prior research has established early puberty as a risk factor for delinquent behavior, studies to date have not yet investigated whether early puberty is also linked to intimate partner violence in adolescence. Prior epidemiologic research has found that increasing age in adolescence is a risk factor for dating violence, but this work has not yet incorporated the element of pubertal maturation. The present study examines the relative effects of chronological age and maturational age in a biosocial model predicting risk for intimate partner violence among adolescent females, net of established control variables, using three waves of data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health. These findings indicate that early maturation in females is an additional risk factor for exposure to intimate partner violence in adolescence. The importance of disentangling types of age effects as raised in the developmental literature and as supported by these findings is discussed in relation to the prevention of youth violence.

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