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      Psychopathy is the Unified Theory of Crime

      Youth Violence and Juvenile Justice
      SAGE Publications

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          Human aggression.

          Research on human aggression has progressed to a point at which a unifying framework is needed. Major domain-limited theories of aggression include cognitive neoassociation, social learning, social interaction, script, and excitation transfer theories. Using the general aggression model (GAM), this review posits cognition, affect, and arousal to mediate the effects of situational and personological variables on aggression. The review also organizes recent theories of the development and persistence of aggressive personality. Personality is conceptualized as a set of stable knowledge structures that individuals use to interpret events in their social world and to guide their behavior. In addition to organizing what is already known about human aggression, this review, using the GAM framework, also serves the heuristic function of suggesting what research is needed to fill in theoretical gaps and can be used to create and test interventions for reducing aggression.
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            Psychopathy as a clinical and empirical construct.

            In this review, we focus on two major influences on current conceptualizations of psychopathy: one clinical, with its origins largely in the early case studies of Cleckley, and the other empirical, the result of widespread use of the Hare Psychopathy Checklist-Revised (PCL-R) for assessment purposes. Some investigators assert that the PCL-R, ostensibly based on Cleckley's work, has "drifted" from the construct described in his Clinical Profile. We evaluate this profile, note its basis in an unrepresentative sample of patients, and suggest that its literal and uncritical acceptance by the research community has become problematical. We also argue that the idea of construct "drift" is irrelevant to current conceptualizations of psychopathy, which are better informed by the extensive empirical research on the integration of structural, genetic, developmental, personality, and neurobiological research findings than by rigid adherence to early clinical formulations. We offer some suggestions for future research on psychopathy.
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              Stability of aggressive reaction patterns in males: a review.

              Dan Olweus (1979)

                Author and article information

                Journal
                Youth Violence and Juvenile Justice
                Youth Violence and Juvenile Justice
                SAGE Publications
                1541-2040
                1556-9330
                June 28 2009
                May 11 2009
                : 7
                : 3
                : 256-273
                Article
                10.1177/1541204009333834
                fe74d082-e236-4e44-804d-2cf0ff4e564b
                © 2009

                http://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license

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