
@article{ref1,
title="Development of an actuarial static risk model suitable for automatic scoring for predicting juvenile recidivism",
journal="Legal and criminological psychology",
year="2015",
author="McKinlay, Audrey and James, Victoria L. and Grace, Randolph C.",
volume="20",
number="2",
pages="288-305",
abstract="OBJECTIVES: To test the feasibility of an actuarial model for juvenile offending suitable for automatic scoring. DesignWe identified a nationally representative sample of 936 young persons aged 13-17 (745 male, 191 female) who received a juvenile justice intake in 2002 in New Zealand. <br><br>METHODS: Best-subsets logistic regression and a formal model selection criterion were used to generate a predictive model for reoffending, and a conservative estimate of accuracy was obtained with cross-validation. <br><br>RESULTS: Recidivism during a 1-year follow-up was significantly higher for male (60.8%) compared to female (46.6%) delinquents. The model showed that young persons who were male, younger at their first social welfare intake, and had more prior court dates and a greater frequency of contact with police, were more likely to re-offend. The accuracy of the model was moderately high (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve=.710). A model developed specifically for the female cases failed to provide a significant increase in predictive accuracy. <br><br>CONCLUSIONS: These results demonstrate the feasibility of an actuarial model for juvenile offending that is suitable for automatic scoring. Although male delinquents pose a higher absolute risk of juvenile offending than female delinquents, a common set of items related to history of contact with police and social welfare agencies provide a similarly accurate measure of relative risk for both sexes.  KW: juvenile justice <p /> <p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="1355-3259",
doi="10.1111/lcrp.12024",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/lcrp.12024"
}