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      Risk Factors for Antisocial Behavior in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: A Systematic Review of Longitudinal Studies

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          Abstract

          Violent crime is a major cause of social instability, injury, and death in low- and middle-income countries. Longitudinal studies in high-income countries have provided important evidence on developmental precursors of violence and other antisocial behaviors. However, there may be unique influences or different risk factor effects in other social settings. Extensive searches in seven languages and screening of over 60,000 references identified 39 longitudinal studies of antisocial behavior in low- and middle-income countries. Many risk factors have roughly the same average effects as when studied in high-income countries. Stability of aggression over a 3-year period is almost identical across low- and middle-income countries and high-income countries. Dimensions of comorbid psychopathology such as low self-control, hyperactivity, and sensation seeking are associated with antisocial behavior in low- and middle-income countries, but some early physical health factors have consistently weak or null effects.

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          Annual research review: A meta-analysis of the worldwide prevalence of mental disorders in children and adolescents.

          The literature on the prevalence of mental disorders affecting children and adolescents has expanded significantly over the last three decades around the world. Despite the field having matured significantly, there has been no meta-analysis to calculate a worldwide-pooled prevalence and to empirically assess the sources of heterogeneity of estimates.
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            The Drugs/Violence Nexus: A Tripartite Conceptual Framework

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              Research review: the importance of callous-unemotional traits for developmental models of aggressive and antisocial behavior.

              The current paper reviews research suggesting that the presence of a callous and unemotional interpersonal style designates an important subgroup of antisocial and aggressive youth. Specifically, callous-unemotional (CU) traits (e.g., lack of guilt, absence of empathy, callous use of others) seem to be relatively stable across childhood and adolescence and they designate a group of youth with a particularly severe, aggressive, and stable pattern of antisocial behavior. Further, antisocial youth with CU traits show a number of distinct emotional, cognitive, and personality characteristics compared to other antisocial youth. These characteristics of youth with CU traits have important implications for causal models of antisocial and aggressive behavior, for methods used to study antisocial youth, and for assessing and treating antisocial and aggressive behavior in children and adolescents.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: professor
                Role: doctoral candidate
                Role: professor of child and family psychology
                Role: lecturer
                Role: senior research public health analyst
                Role: associate professor of nursing and public health
                Role: professor of comparative and developmental criminology
                Journal
                101734512
                48026
                Crime Justice
                Crime Justice
                Crime and justice (Chicago, Ill.)
                0192-3234
                2153-0416
                29 September 2018
                26 March 2018
                09 October 2018
                : 47
                : 1
                : 255-364
                Affiliations
                Postgraduate Program in Epidemiology, Federal University of Pelotas, Brazil
                Institute of Criminology, Cambridge University
                Department of Social Policy and Intervention, Oxford University
                Department of Health and Social Sciences, University of the West of England
                Center for Advanced Methods Development, Research Triangle Institute
                School of Nursing and Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania
                Institute of Criminology, Cambridge University
                Article
                EMS79596
                10.1086/696590
                6176906
                30310248
                72fe08b8-a0ba-45dc-b244-8cafec07e3af

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0), which permits noncommerical reuse of the work with attribution. For commercial use, contact journalpermissions@ 123456press.uchicago.edu . http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/

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