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Onset of Offending and Life Course Among Men Convicted of Murder
Russell P. Dobash
University of Manchester, Russell.Dobash{at}manchester.ac.uk
R. Emerson Dobash
University of Manchester
Kate Cavanagh
University of Stirling
Duncan Smith
Cathie Marsh Centre for Census and Survey Research, University of Manchester
Juanjo Medina-Ariza
University of Manchester
Although the developmental perspective has become a leading paradigm in criminology, little attention has been paid to the onset of offending and life course of murderers within this tradition. We use bivariate and Multiple Correspondence Analysis to investigate the life course and criminal careers of three onset groups among a UK sample of 786 men convicted of murder. The early-onset group (20% of the sample) is more likely to have experienced significant problems in childhood and adulthood. The no-offending group (10% of the sample) is the least likely to have had problematic backgrounds. The childhoods of the late-onset group (67% of the sample) resemble the no-offending group (with few problems) but in adulthood they more closely resemble the early-onset group (with many problems). The implications of these findings for developmental criminology and homicide research are discussed.
Key Words: murder onset of offending life course criminal careers multiple correspondence analysis
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Homicide Studies, Vol. 11, No. 4,
243-271 (2007)
DOI: 10.1177/1088767907306850

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