Abstract

Where previous studies have found consistent links between family factors and antisocial behavior, it is important to examine this relationship from a developmental perspective and account for heterogeneous antisocial development. In the present study, our goal was twofold: (1) identify and examine trajectories of self-reported antisocial behavior, and (2) compare the intercepts and slopes of family functioning of adolescents with different trajectories of antisocial behavior. We used a large national representative sample of 2230 Dutch boys and girls who we followed from approximately 10 to 22 years. We applied Latent class growth modeling to identify antisocial trajectories for boys and girls separately, across which the intercepts and slopes of family functioning were compared. We found four antisocial trajectories for boys and three antisocial trajectories for girls, which mostly corresponded with the trajectories found in previous literature. Further, we found that family functioning did not differ as a function of membership to a particular trajectory of antisocial behavior, neither on baseline measures nor on changes of family functioning across adolescence. Within this specific sample of adolescents, these results suggest that family functioning, as perceived by parents, remain stable regardless of antisocial behavior. Future research, in addition to using general family functioning measures, should also examine day-to-day family interactions, preferably also accounting for the perspective of the adolescent.

Highlights

  • Despite the findings of Reitz et al (2006), most studies found support for a longitudinal bidirectional relationship between family variables and adolescent antisocial behavior, which underlines the importance of studying this relationship from a developmental perspective (Jang and Smith 1997; Larsson et al 2008; Pardini et al 2008)

  • Studies that accounted for different trajectories of antisocial behavior when relating family measures to antisocial behavior, have found that impaired family functioning in childhood is often related to antisocial trajectories in adolescence (e.g., Cavanagh and Cauffman 2017; Fergusson et al 2000; Odgers et al 2008; Roisman et al 2010)

  • Previous studies have found consistent links between family factors and antisocial behavior, it is important to examine this relationship from a developmental perspective and account for heterogeneous antisocial development

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Summary

Introduction

Evidence for the socialization process from family to child is strong, there are two important factors to take into account when studying this relationship. We did mention several studies that examined the relationship between family and antisocial behavior accounting for the development of both constructs over time. All of these studies treated antisocial development as a homogenous process and did not account for possible different antisocial trajectories.

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