The potential influence of criminological rationales in considering childhood abuse as mitigating to sentencing.

Child Abuse & Neglect
Colleen M Berryessa

Abstract

U.S. courts currently show no coherent approach with regard to how evidence of childhood abuse is considered in sentencing. Existing state and federal caselaw suggests that courts rarely place significant consideration on evidence of childhood abuse during sentencing, but the reasons why offenders who have been subjected to childhood abuse rarely receive mitigated or alternative sentences remain unknown. Yet literature has suggested it might be because no convincing rationales have been yet developed for the court in contending that penalties of offenders who were subjected to childhood abuse should be mitigated. This research examines if and how criminological theoretical perspectives linking childhood abuse and later offending (Social Control Theory, Social Learning Theory, General Strain Theory) are persuasive in arguing childhood abuse (neglect, witnessing trauma, sexual abuse, physical abuse) as mitigating to criminal sentencing. A national sample of U.S. adults (N = 521). A multi-factorial, vignette-based experiment was conducted, utilizing OLS and mediation analyses. Evidence on childhood abuse, and particularly sexual abuse, reduced support for incapacitation (B = -0.13, p ≤ 0.05) and increased support for rehabilitatio...Continue Reading

References

Apr 14, 1989·Science·C S Widom
Jul 17, 2007·Child Maltreatment·Joshua P Mersky, Arthur J Reynolds
Oct 27, 2012·Cognition & Emotion·Jared PiazzaPaulo Sousa
Jun 22, 2013·Journal of Interpersonal Violence·Stephen J Watts, Thomas L McNulty
Mar 15, 2016·Journal of Midwifery & Women's Health·Jenna A LoGiudice, Cheryl T Beck
Apr 23, 2016·Criminal Behaviour and Mental Health : CBMH·Kathryn H HowellSandra A Graham-Bermann
May 1, 2012·The Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency·Joshua P MerskyArthur J Reynolds
Sep 29, 2019·Child Abuse & Neglect·Daniela Porto FausStella Regina Taquette

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