Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

R E S E A R C H T R I A N G L E P A R K, N O R T H C A R O L I N A OJJDP GIRLS STUDY GROUP OJJDP GIRLS STUDY GROUP Stephanie R. Hawkins, Ph.D. Coordinating.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "R E S E A R C H T R I A N G L E P A R K, N O R T H C A R O L I N A OJJDP GIRLS STUDY GROUP OJJDP GIRLS STUDY GROUP Stephanie R. Hawkins, Ph.D. Coordinating."— Presentation transcript:

1 R E S E A R C H T R I A N G L E P A R K, N O R T H C A R O L I N A OJJDP GIRLS STUDY GROUP OJJDP GIRLS STUDY GROUP Stephanie R. Hawkins, Ph.D. Coordinating Council on Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Quarterly Meeting June 6, 2008 Washington, DC Crime, Violence, and Justice Center

2 GIRLS STUDY GROUP ACTIVITIES n Literature Review n Secondary Data Analysis n Screening and Assessment Instrument Review n Program Review

3 HIGHLIGHTS FROM THE LITERATURE REVIEW

4 l Family dynamics u Structure and stability u Supervision and control u Family criminality u Maltreatment l School involvement l Neighborhood disadvantage l Availability of community-based programs GENDER SIMILARITIES IN RISK AND PROTECTIVE FACTORS

5 lEarly puberty or developmental factors lSexual assault lDepression and anxiety lRomantic partners lAttachment and bonding to school and pro- social institutions GENDER SENSITIVITY TO RISK AND PROTECTIVE FACTORS

6 TAKE HOME POINT FROM LITERATURE n Girls and boys experience many of the same risks, but they differ in sensitivity to and rate of exposure to these risks and, as a result, they may have different programming needs.

7 HIGHLIGHTS FROM THE SECONDARY DATA ANALYSES

8 TRENDS IN GIRLS’ VIOLENCE: REPORTS OF ARRESTS n Gap between juvenile female and juvenile male arrests for aggravated assault has declined n Female arrests for simple assault have increased while male arrests for simple assault have declined MalesFemales 19962005% Change19962005% Change Aggravated Assault36,97228,312-23.49,1528,655-5.4 Simple Assaults99,61095,555-4.138,24047,402+24.0 (National Center for Juvenile Justice 2007)

9 TRENDS IN GIRLS’ VIOLENCE: SELF-REPORT  Levels of assault for juvenile females and males have been fairly constant over the past two decades  Female involvement in violence has not increased relative to male violence  There has been more change in girls’ arrests than in underlying violent behavior of girls

10 POSSIBLE EXPLANATIONS n Increases in girls’ arrests may be an artifact of changing policies and attitudes l Mandatory arrest policies and domestic violence laws l School’s zero-tolerance policies l Widening definitions of violence l Shift in societal attitude

11 NATIONAL INCIDENT BASED REPORTING SYSTEM (NIBRS) n Mandatory and pro-arrest policies increased the likelihood of arrest for girls and boys. n Effects are stronger for girls. n Youth more likely to be arrested when mother is assaulted

12 RESILIENCE n Some protective factors not strong enough to mitigate the influence of childhood risks. n Must know how protective factors operate in the lives of girls and when these protective factors are most relevant to girls’ development l Caring adult was protective during adolescence and not protective during young adulthood when girls have been physically abused n Must know the risk confronting adolescent girls and consider which protective factors are strong enough to buffer against particular risks l For sexually assaulted girls, doing well in school was protective during adolescence and religiosity was protective during young adulthood

13 SEXUAL ABUSE AND DELINQUENCY n Meta-analysis of 13 studies found solid relationship between sexual abuse and female delinquency n This relationship is comparable to many other risk factors for female delinquency n No gender difference in delinquency outcomes for sexually abused youth

14 PATHWAYS TO DELINQUENCY n Girls are involved in a range of delinquent behaviors l Runaway – neither most common or 1st offense n Siz eable number of girls are involved in serious delinquency but this is short-lived and they revert back to lower levels of delinquency n Delinquent behaviors begin before middle school

15 HIGHLIGHTS FROM THE SCREENING AND ASSESSMENT INSTRUMENT REVIEW

16 SCREENING AND ASSESSMENT INSTRUMENTS n Some of the challenges with screening and assessment instruments for girls include  Inability to accurately identify behaviors  Inappropriate or misclassification n 143 instruments reviewed n 51% provided separate norms or scoring systems for girls or showed favorable gender analysis n Mental health instruments are most likely to address gender performance n Only 3 gender-appropriate risk assessment instruments were developed and tested across multiple jurisdictions (out of 35)

17 HIGHLIGHTS FROM THE PROGRAM REVIEW

18 PROGRAM REVIEW n Reviewed programs designed to prevent and reduce female delinquency n Out of 62 programs cataloged, 18 had been evaluated. l None of the 18 programs met the criteria to be rated as “Effective,” “Effective with Reservation,” or “Ineffective.” l 4 programs met the criteria to be rated as “Promising.” l 4 programs met the criteria to be rated as “Inconclusive Evidence.” l 10 programs met the criteria to be rated as “Insufficient Evidence.”

19 SUSTAINABILITY ISSUES n 11 of the 18 evaluated programs are still operating: l None of the 4 programs rated “Promising” are still operating l 2 of the 4 programs rated “Inconclusive Evidence” are still operating l 9 of the 10 programs rated “Insufficient Evidence are still operating

20 BLUEPRINTS FOR VIOLENCE PREVENTION PROGRAMS l Model programs in Blueprints work well for girls as well as boys. l Why? u They are multi-dimensional u Have individualized treatment plans to meet individual needs u Connection to pro-social institutions

21 WHAT IS NEEDED? n Gender responsive programs need more focus on evaluation to determine effectiveness n Promising gender responsive programs need more focus on sustainability

22 PRODUCTS FROM THE GIRLS STUDY GROUP

23 PRODUCTS n Book l Delinquent Girls: Findings From the Girls Study Group. Temple University Press. n Articles l Zahn, M. A. (2006) The Girls’ Study Group: Its Creation and Achievements, The Criminologist, 31(5): September/October, 1-4. l Zahn, M. A. (2006) The Causes of Girls’ Delinquency and the Challenges of the Rise in Female Delinquency, Family Court Review, 12.

24 BULLETINS n Violence by Teenage Girls: Trends and Context (released) n The Girls Study Group – Charting the way to Gender-responsive delinquency prevention n Resilient Girls – Factors that Protect Against Delinquency n Causes and Correlates of Girls’ Delinquency n Examining the Gender-based performance of risk-assessment and treatment-focused instruments for delinquents n Gender-Responsive Delinquency programs: An evidence-based review n Developmental Sequences of Girls’ Delinquent Behavior

25 TOOLS FOR THE FIELD n Bibliographic search page includes all the citations used in the development of the literature review from the Girls Study Group members. l Contains 2,388 citations n Online searchable database of the screening and assessment instruments examined and information collected about each instrument (in process)

26 THE GIRLS STUDY GROUP WEBSITE http://girlsstudygroup.rti.org/

27 GIRLS STUDY GROUP WEB SITE STATISTICS (January 1, 2008 through May 31, 2008) n The website received 17,299 hits n The bibliographic search page received 834 hits n Documents were downloaded 4,784 times n The average number of people who visit the website each day has steadily increased over the years l 51 (2005) l 58 (2006) l 101 (2007) l 113 from Jan- May 2008


Download ppt "R E S E A R C H T R I A N G L E P A R K, N O R T H C A R O L I N A OJJDP GIRLS STUDY GROUP OJJDP GIRLS STUDY GROUP Stephanie R. Hawkins, Ph.D. Coordinating."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google