DARK TRAITS AND DARK FAMILIES: FAMILY DYSFUNCTIONS, PSYCHOPATHY AND SADISM AS FACILITATORS OF ADOLESCENT CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR
Abstract
Psychopathy and dysfunctional family characteristics have been shown to
facilitate criminal behavior and criminal recidivism. The role of trait sadism
has not been explored in this context. We measured family dysfunctions
(single or dual-parent families, quality of relations in families, presence of
risk-factors), psychopathy (Interpersonal, Affective and Lifestyle traits) and
sadism in a small sample of convicted adolescents (N=100). We collected
measures of criminal behavior as well: the onset of criminal behavior,
number of corrective measures, offences and convictions. The data showed
that participants who grew up in dysfunctional families had more
pronounced psychopathy and criminal behavior. Interpersonal and Lifestyle
psychopathy traits positively correlated to criminal behavior as well. Sadism
had a negative correlation with the onset of criminal behavior. In a
regression model predicting general criminal recidivism (the first principal
component extracted from the measures of criminal behavior), only low
quality family relations and high Lifestyle traits had an independent
contribution to the prediction. We did not find interactions between the dark
traits and family dysfunctions in the prediction of criminal recidivism. The
data extends on previous knowledge regarding the role of the dark traits and
family characteristics in adolescent criminal behavior.
M category
M14openAccess
M14
openAccess
Collections
The following license files are associated with this item: