
@article{ref1,
title="DELINQUENT PHASES: The Case of Temporally Intensified Shoplifting Behaviour",
journal="British journal of criminology",
year="1998",
author="Kivivuori, Janne",
volume="38",
number="4",
pages="663-680",
abstract="This article examines the prevalence and correlates of shoplifting phases among Finnish adolescents. The data are based on the Finnish Self-Report Delinquency Study (FSRD-96) whose target population consisted of 9th grade (15-16-year-old) students. The identification of phases was based both on behavioural sequences and subjective interpretations. Consequently a shoplifting phase was defined in a relative fashion as a period during which the respondent shoplifted more often than usually. Of the respondents, 23 per cent had experienced at least one such period. The typical (modal) shoplzfting phase began at the age of 13 and ended at the age of 14. It lasted for 26 weeks and amounted to 15 thefts. Among the correlates of phasic shoplifting behaviour were participation in other offences and low level of parental control.<p />",
language="",
issn="0007-0955",
doi="10.1093/bjc/38.4.663",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/bjc/38.4.663"
}