Original article Latent classes of criminal intent associated with criminal behaviour

Background This study aimed to examine the number of latent classes of criminal intent that exist among prisoners and to look at the associations with recidivism, number of police arrests, type of offending (robbery, violent offences, murder, and multiple offences), and age. Participants and p...

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Main Authors: Daniel Boduszek, Katie Dhingra, Camille Stander, Maria Ioannou, Derrol Palmer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Termedia Publishing House 2014-07-01
Series:Current Issues in Personality Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.termedia.pl/Original-article-Latent-classes-of-criminal-intent-associated-with-criminal-behaviour,75,23261,1,1.html
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spelling doaj-1d33fe3e9af847bcb9f0c14c0d6b53902020-11-25T01:11:19ZengTermedia Publishing HouseCurrent Issues in Personality Psychology2353-41922353-561X2014-07-01229210210.5114/cipp.2014.4430523261Original article Latent classes of criminal intent associated with criminal behaviourDaniel BoduszekKatie DhingraCamille StanderMaria IoannouDerrol PalmerBackground This study aimed to examine the number of latent classes of criminal intent that exist among prisoners and to look at the associations with recidivism, number of police arrests, type of offending (robbery, violent offences, murder, and multiple offences), and age. Participants and procedure Latent class analysis was used to identify homogeneous subgroups of prisoners based on their responses to the 10 questions reflecting criminal intent. Participants were 309 male recidivistic prisoners incarcerated in a maximum security prison. Multinomial logistic regression was used to interpret the nature of the latent classes, or groups, by estimating the association between recidivism and latent classes of criminal intent while controlling for offence type (robbery, violent offences, murder, and multiple offences), number of arrests, and age. Results The best fitting latent class model was a three-class solution: ‘High criminal intent’ (49.3%), ‘Intermediate criminal intent’ (41.3%), and ‘Low criminal intent’ (9.4%). The latent classes were differentially related to the external variables (recidivism, violent offences, and age). Conclusions Criminal intent is best explained by three homogeneous classes that appear to represent an underlying continuum. Future work is needed to identify whether these distinct classes of criminal intent may predict engagement in various types of criminal behaviour.http://www.termedia.pl/Original-article-Latent-classes-of-criminal-intent-associated-with-criminal-behaviour,75,23261,1,1.htmlcriminal intent recidivism prisoners latent class analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Daniel Boduszek
Katie Dhingra
Camille Stander
Maria Ioannou
Derrol Palmer
spellingShingle Daniel Boduszek
Katie Dhingra
Camille Stander
Maria Ioannou
Derrol Palmer
Original article Latent classes of criminal intent associated with criminal behaviour
Current Issues in Personality Psychology
criminal intent
recidivism
prisoners
latent class analysis
author_facet Daniel Boduszek
Katie Dhingra
Camille Stander
Maria Ioannou
Derrol Palmer
author_sort Daniel Boduszek
title Original article Latent classes of criminal intent associated with criminal behaviour
title_short Original article Latent classes of criminal intent associated with criminal behaviour
title_full Original article Latent classes of criminal intent associated with criminal behaviour
title_fullStr Original article Latent classes of criminal intent associated with criminal behaviour
title_full_unstemmed Original article Latent classes of criminal intent associated with criminal behaviour
title_sort original article latent classes of criminal intent associated with criminal behaviour
publisher Termedia Publishing House
series Current Issues in Personality Psychology
issn 2353-4192
2353-561X
publishDate 2014-07-01
description Background This study aimed to examine the number of latent classes of criminal intent that exist among prisoners and to look at the associations with recidivism, number of police arrests, type of offending (robbery, violent offences, murder, and multiple offences), and age. Participants and procedure Latent class analysis was used to identify homogeneous subgroups of prisoners based on their responses to the 10 questions reflecting criminal intent. Participants were 309 male recidivistic prisoners incarcerated in a maximum security prison. Multinomial logistic regression was used to interpret the nature of the latent classes, or groups, by estimating the association between recidivism and latent classes of criminal intent while controlling for offence type (robbery, violent offences, murder, and multiple offences), number of arrests, and age. Results The best fitting latent class model was a three-class solution: ‘High criminal intent’ (49.3%), ‘Intermediate criminal intent’ (41.3%), and ‘Low criminal intent’ (9.4%). The latent classes were differentially related to the external variables (recidivism, violent offences, and age). Conclusions Criminal intent is best explained by three homogeneous classes that appear to represent an underlying continuum. Future work is needed to identify whether these distinct classes of criminal intent may predict engagement in various types of criminal behaviour.
topic criminal intent
recidivism
prisoners
latent class analysis
url http://www.termedia.pl/Original-article-Latent-classes-of-criminal-intent-associated-with-criminal-behaviour,75,23261,1,1.html
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