Violent Female Youth: An Examination of Instrumental Violence, Psychopathy, and Offense Characteristics
Behavioral Sciences & the Law / BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES AND THE LAW
Published online on January 27, 2014
Abstract
Female youth are a strikingly under‐studied population within the accumulated forensic literature, yet they represent a significant and growing population within forensic contexts. Despite research demonstrating a relationship between the presence of psychopathic traits and instrumental violence among adult offenders, researchers have only recently begun to examine this relationship among juvenile offenders. Our investigation of this potential relationship among a large sample of female offenders (N = 145) who had committed a violent offense revealed that youths with more psychopathic traits were not significantly more likely to use instrumental violence in the commission of their crimes than those with less psychopathic traits. The findings are discussed in terms of offense severity, and a comprehensive overview of female youths' specific motivations and offense characteristics are provided. Research directions and clinical implications are discussed. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.