TY - JOUR PY - 2012// TI - Suppressing the harmful effects of key risk factors: results from the Children at rRsk experimental intervention JO - Criminal justice and behavior A1 - Hay, Carter A1 - Stults, Brian A1 - Restivo, Emily SP - 1088 EP - 1106 VL - 39 IS - 8 N2 - Many programs try to reduce adolescent offending with a risk factor approach in which services target the key causes of crime pertaining to families, peer groups, and schools. These programs often reduce crime, presumably through either prevention (in which exposure to a risk factor is prevented from ever occurring) or reversal (in which an individual possessing a risk factor advances to a state of no longer having it). This study examines an alternative way in which such programs may reduce delinquency: They may achieve the goal of risk factor suppression, whereby a risk factor that is neither prevented nor reversed is rendered inconsequential by program treatment. Thus, the risk factor continues to be present, but by virtue of program treatment, it no longer elevates individual involvement in crime. The authors consider this possibility with evaluation data from the experimental Children at Risk program, a 2-year case management intervention that served high-risk early adolescents. KW: Juvenile justice; Juvenile delinquency;

Language: en

LA - en SN - 0093-8548 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0093854812442475 ID - ref1 ER -