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Journal Article

Citation

Olver ME, Wong SC. Sex. Abuse 2006; 18(1): 65-82.

Affiliation

Mental Health and Addiction Services, Young Offender Team, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada. mark.olver@saskatoonhealthregion.ca

Copyright

(Copyright © 2006, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1007/s11194-006-9006-3

PMID

16763759

Abstract

The relationships between psychopathy, sex offender type, sexual deviance, and recidivism were examined in 156 federally incarcerated sex offenders in a 10-year follow-up study. The rapists and mixed offenders demonstrated higher psychopathy scores than did the child molesters and incest offenders (total scores and Factor 2 scores on the Psychopathy Checklist--Revised PCL-R; R. D. Hare, 2003). Factor 1 scores were approximately the same in all groups. The PCL-R was a weak predictor of sexual recidivism but consistently predicted nonsexual violent recidivism and general recidivism (mainly via Factor 2). Sexual deviance measured by a structured rating scheme predicted sexual recidivism. Sexual deviance, so rated, was a stronger predictor of sexual recidivism than psychopathy but the two interacted significantly suggesting that psychopathy could potentiate sexual recidivism. Although psychopathy was a strong positive predictor of general nonsexual recidivism, sexual deviance was inversely related, and no interaction was observed between psychopathy, sexual deviance, and nonsexual recidivism.


Language: en

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