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Developmental Criminology and the Crime Decline : A Comparative Analysis of the Criminal Careers of Two New South Wales Birth Cohorts

Part of the Elements in Criminology series
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Throughout the 1990s many countries around the world experienced the beginnings of what would later become the most significant and protracted decline in crime ever recorded.

Although not a universal experience, the so-called international crime-drop was an unpredicted and unprecedented event which now offers fertile ground for reflection on many of criminology's key theories and debates.

Through the lens of developmental and life-course criminology, this Element compares the criminal offending trajectories of two Australian birth cohorts born ten years apart in 1984 and 1994.

It finds that the crime-drop was unlikely the result of any significant change in the prevalence or persistence of early-onset and chronic offending, but the disproportionate disappearance of their low-rate, adolescent-onset peers.

Despite decades of research that has prioritized interventions for at-risk chronic offenders, it seems our greatest global crime prevention achievement to date was in reducing the prevalence of criminal offending in the general population.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1108794793 / 9781108794794
Paperback / softback
364
22/10/2020
United Kingdom
English
75 pages.
Professional & Vocational Learn More