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Journal Article

Citation

Cornell DG. Behav. Sci. Law 1993; 11(4): 389-396.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1993, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1002/bsl.2370110406

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

VioLit summary:

OBJECTIVE:
The purpose of this article by Cornell was to determine if there are differences between juvenile homicide and adult homicide and to examine the offense characteristics associated with the increase in juvenile homicides.

METHODOLOGY:
A quasi-experimental design was employed for this study. Secondary analysis of the FBI Supplemental Homicide Reports for 1984 and 1991 was used. The research examined the offense characteristics of 2,400 juvenile homicide offenders from the Homicide Reports. The study reported that the information from these reports includes demographic information on victim and offender, the relationship between victim and offender, and additional circumstantial information about the incident. The total data sets included arrest data for 32,526 homicides for the chosen years combined. The data were gathered from the 50 states and Puerto Rico, American Samoa, and Guam. Juveniles were classified as ages 10 to 17. The study performed two sets of analysis. The first set compared 1,668 juveniles and 11,012 adults arrested homicides for 1991. The analysis was concerned with the following variables: number of victims; the presence of accomplices; the sex, race, and ethnicity of the offender; the offender's weapon; the relationship between the offender and victim; and the circumstances (e.g., crime, argument) of the offense. The study placed all of the homicides into two categories, crime-related (robbery, rape, burglary, etc.) or conflict-related (dispute or argument with the victim). The second part of the analysis focused on juvenile homicides. The study compared the homicides of 1984 to 1991 using the same variables from the first section of the analysis. The analyses used Chi-square statistics and a contingency coefficient (C) which measures the size of the effect and the strength of the significance findings.

FINDINGS/DISCUSSION:
The study found that there was a statistically significant association between juvenile status and presence of an accomplice (p<.001). 42% of juveniles and 13% of adults had an accomplice. The research found that most of all the homicide offenders were male (89%). There was a significant difference in gender proportions for adults and juveniles (p<.001). 12% of the adult offenders were women and 6% of the juvenile offenders were women. It was shown that there was a statistically significant association between racial/ethnic status and juvenile status (p<.001). Whites made up 40% of adult offenders and 22% of juvenile offenders. A statistically significant association was found between juvenile status and type of weapon (p<.001). 61% of juveniles and 49% of adults used handguns. Also significant was the association between the offender-victim relationship and juvenile status (p<.001). The victim relationships for juvenile offenders were 34% for strangers and 9% for family members. For adults the rate was 21% for strangers and 22% for family members. When the homicides were divided into conflict-related and crime-related categories the study found more significant results. The crime circumstance and juvenile status association was significant ((p<.001). More crime-related homicides were committed by juveniles (48%) than by adults (26%). More conflict-related homicides were committed by adults (74%) than by juveniles (52%). For the second set of analyses the statistics for 1984 and 1991 were compared. The study found that juvenile homicide involving an accomplice increased from 34% to 42% (p<.001) during that time. The racial/ethnic breakdown also saw a significant change (p<.001). Black juvenile offenders increased from 46% to 62% and white offenders decreased from 37% to 19%. The research found that the increase in the use of handguns (37% to 61%) was significant (p<.001). In addition the changes in the victim-offender relationship were found to be significant (p<.001). In 1984 29% of the victims were strangers, 21% were family members, and 50% were acquaintances. In 1991 34% were strangers, 9% family members, and 57% acquaintances. The author found that crime-related homicides increased from 36% in 1984 to 48% in 1991. The study argued that one of the most notable shift was in the use of handguns. The author also noted the large increase in crime-related homicides. Finally, the study reported that the increased role of accomplices in juvenile homicides may suggest gang or group related involvement.

AUTHOR'S RECOMMENDATIONS:
The author suggested that this study shows the need to examine the role of the handgun in juvenile crime. He noted six circumstances where handguns may increase juvenile homicide: (1) criminal youth may move from low-risk stealing to higher-risk behavior such as armed robbery, (2) peer groups or gangs participate in an "arms race" resulting in shooting, (3) youth accomplices may carry guns for adult criminals, (4) youth who are abused may retaliate, (5) "playground arguments" can become violent, and (6) emotionally disturbed youth may use guns they find in their homes. The author argued that many juvenile homicides are not planned and handguns just serve to escalate conflicts. The author noted several limitations with this study. First, it was noted that the actual number of homicides is not equal to the number of arrests. The author suggested that these data not be mistaken for the entire number of homicides. Secondly, it was demonstrated that the effect sizes are difficult to interpret and even small effects can be important. The author stated that these results support further research on the differences between adult and juvenile homicide. He recommended that future studies examine whether the increase in juvenile homicide is a precursor to an overall increase of crime for these juveniles as they approach the high-risk ages.

(CSPV Abstract - Copyright © 1992-2007 by the Center for the Study and Prevention of Violence, Institute of Behavioral Science, Regents of the University of Colorado)

1980s
1990s
Juvenile Homicide
Juvenile Violence
Juvenile Offender
Homicide Offender
Offender Characteristics
Comparative Analysis
Adult Homicide
Adult Offender
Adult Violence
Age Differences
Offense Characteristics
03-05

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