NCJ Number
238378
Journal
Canadian Journal of Criminology and Criminal Justice Volume: 54 Issue: 1 Dated: January 2012 Pages: 101-115
Date Published
January 2012
Length
15 pages
Annotation
This article examines two fundamental regularities in co-offending research.
Abstract
Co-offending research has generated two fundamental regularities. First, co-offending is most prevalent during youth and then decreases as offenders age. Second, the average number of offenders per criminal incident is also highest in youth and decreases as offenders age. These regularities, and co-offending in general, are often explained with reference to a developmental approach: youth spend more time in groups than adults for their activities and crime is simply one of those activities. The authors investigate these empirical regularities by single year of age, 12-29 years, with a detailed crime classification in a large sample from British Columbia. These empirical regularities prove to be far from monolithic, being less notable as offenders age for several violent crime classifications. (Published Abstract)