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Summary

Summary of all the literature of Criminal behavior during the lifecourse

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This is a cohesive and easy-to-read summary covering six weeks of literature for the course Criminal Behavior During the Life Course. The summary integrates key theories, concepts, and empirical findings into a clear narrative that helps you understand how criminal behavior develops, persists, and declines over time. Each section connects the readings seamlessly, including illustrative examples from research to make complex theories more understandable

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October 11, 2025
Number of pages
49
Written in
2025/2026
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Week 1: Benson (2013) Summary of Chapter 1: An Overview of Life
Course Theory and Research....................................................................5
Core Concepts and Principles................................................................6
Criminal Careers and Life Course Criminology......................................6
Key Theoretical Issues...........................................................................7
Research Designs and Studies...............................................................9
Contributions and Limitations................................................................9
Conclusion.............................................................................................9
Week 2: Summary: Laub & Sampson – Turning Points in the Life
Course: Why Change Matters to the Study of Crime...........................10
Introduction............................................................................................10
A Person-Based, Life-History Approach..................................................10
Key Concepts..........................................................................................10
1. Social Bonds and Informal Social Control........................................10
2. Turning Points..................................................................................11
3. Continuity and Change....................................................................11
4. Contextual Factors...........................................................................11
Illustrative Cases....................................................................................11
Conclusion..............................................................................................12
Summary: Terrie Moffitt – Adolescence-Limited and Life-Course-
Persistent Antisocial Behavior: A Developmental Taxonomy...............12
Introduction............................................................................................12
1. Age and Antisocial Behavior...............................................................13
2. Life-Course-Persistent (LCP) Offenders...............................................13
Definition.............................................................................................13
Origins.................................................................................................14
Maintenance & Elaboration..................................................................14
Psychopathology..................................................................................14
3. Adolescence-Limited (AL) Offenders...................................................14
Definition.............................................................................................14
Beginnings...........................................................................................15
Desistance...........................................................................................15
Not Pathological...................................................................................15

,4. Secular Change..................................................................................15
5. Implications for Research...................................................................16
Conclusion..............................................................................................16
Week 3: Summary of “The Crime Drop and the Security Hypothesis”. . .16
1. The Crime Drop Phenomenon..........................................................17
2. Why Other Explanations Don’t Fit....................................................17
3. The Security Hypothesis (Main Argument)......................................17
4. Case Study: Vehicle Theft................................................................18
5. Extending the Security Hypothesis..................................................18
6. Policy Lessons..................................................................................19
Summary of “Environmental Criminology”.............................................19
1. What is Environmental Criminology (EC)?.......................................19
2. Core Theories of EC.........................................................................20
a) Routine Activity Theory (RAT) – Cohen & Felson (1979)...............20
b) Crime Pattern Theory (CPT) – Brantingham & Brantingham.........21
c) Rational Choice Perspective (RCP)................................................21
3. Applications in Practice....................................................................21
4. Criticisms and Future Directions......................................................22
Week 4: Summary: “Does the intergenerational transmission of crime
depend on family complexity?”...........................................................23
Background and Objective...................................................................23
Methodology........................................................................................23
Key Findings........................................................................................24
1. Role of Stepfathers.......................................................................24
2. Independent Risk of Stepfathers...................................................24
3. Gender Differences.......................................................................25
Theoretical Implications.......................................................................25
Conclusion...........................................................................................25
Summary: Early Childhood Risk Factors for Exclusionary Discipline....26
Background and Significance..............................................................26
Theoretical Framework........................................................................26
Methodology........................................................................................27
Key Findings........................................................................................27

, 1. Direct Effects................................................................................27
2. Interaction Effects (Support for Moffitt)........................................27
Implications.........................................................................................28
Conclusion...........................................................................................28
Week 5:.....................................................................................................30
Summary: “Peers and Offender Decision-Making” (Hoeben & Thomas)
............................................................................................................30
1. Offender Decision-Making: Rational Choice and Human
Interdependence..................................................................................30
2. Peer Influence: Socialization and Situational Opportunity...............31
3. Mechanisms of Situational Peer Influence.......................................31
A. Passive Peer Influence: The Mere Presence Effect........................32
B. Active Peer Influence: Direct Involvement....................................32
4. Dual-Systems Processing and Peer Influence..................................33
5. Broader Theoretical Links................................................................33
6. Policy Implications...........................................................................34
In Summary.........................................................................................34
Summary: “Changing contexts: A quasi-experiment examining
adolescent delinquency and the transition to high school”....................34
1. Core Finding: Transition Reduces Delinquency................................35
2. Why Does Delinquency Decline? Mediating Mechanisms................35
a. Ties to Delinquent Peers — Differential Association Theory.........36
b. Unstructured Socializing — Routine Activities Theory..................36
c. School Bonding — Social Control Theory......................................36
3. The Role of Transition Structure: Single-Feeder vs. Multifeeder
Systems...............................................................................................36
4. Theoretical Integration and Implications.........................................37
a. Life-Course Criminology................................................................37
b. Differential Association & Routine Activities.................................37
c. Social Control Theory....................................................................38
5. Policy and Broader Implications.......................................................38
6. Methodological Contributions..........................................................38
7. Key Takeaways................................................................................39
Conclusion...........................................................................................39

, Week 6: “Value Orientations, Life Transitions, and Desistance: Assessing
Competing Perspectives”.......................................................................40
🧩 Overview.........................................................................................40
⚖️Competing Theories.........................................................................40
1. Laub & Sampson (2003, 2016) – Age-Graded Theory of Informal
Social Control....................................................................................40
2. Paternoster & Bushway (2009) – Identity Theory of Desistance...41
🧪 Study Design...................................................................................41
📈 Key Findings from Pathways Data..................................................41
1. Temporal Ordering – Which Comes First?.....................................41
2. Necessity – What Is Required for Desistance?..............................42
📊 Supplemental Findings: National Youth Survey (NYS)....................42
💡 Overall Conclusions........................................................................43
🧠 Policy and Practice Implications......................................................43
In Summary.........................................................................................43
Summary of Copp et al. (2019): Desistance from Crime during the
Transition to Adulthood – The Influence of Parents, Peers, and Shifts in
Identity...................................................................................................44
I. Core Theories and Explanatory Concepts of Desistance.....................44
1. Desistance from Crime....................................................................44
2. Traditional Life-Course Theory and Turning Points..........................44
3. Cognitive/Identity Theories of Desistance (e.g., Paternoster &
Bushway, 2009)...................................................................................45
II. Mechanisms and Measures of Change................................................45
1. Internal Identity Measures (Cognitive Processes)............................45
2. Social Network Influences................................................................46
3. Structural and Life-Course Transitions (Traditional Predictors).......46
4. Family Background Concepts..........................................................47
III. Developmental and Methodological Concepts...................................47
1. Developmental Periods....................................................................47
2. Methodology and Measurement......................................................47
IV. Key Findings......................................................................................48
V. Conclusions and Implications.............................................................49
Policy Implications...............................................................................49

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I don't think love the chatgpt answers in the middle were supposed to be hahahah (get that bag tho, would do exactly the same thing;))

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