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‘I Wasn’t Really Bonded with My Family’: Attachment, Loss and Violence among Adolescent Female Offenders

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Abstract

This study analyzes the role of trauma and disrupted attachments in the development of adolescent girls’ violent behavior. A grounded theory approach was applied to the narratives of 24 young women (age 13–16 years old) who were adjudicated and remanded to custody for an assault or robbery. Three types of loss were inductively derived from the data (death of a loved one, physical absence, and psychological unavailability) as were two categories of violence (in the home and in the community).

Findings suggest that extensive losses and violent experiences disrupted the young women’s attachment to their caregivers, and these experiences were disregarded or inadequately addressed. Detachment and the absence of supportive others left the young women poised to engage in a variety of maladaptive behaviors including violence. Theoretical and programmatic implications are discussed.

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Correspondence to Judith A. Ryder.

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Ryder, J.A. ‘I Wasn’t Really Bonded with My Family’: Attachment, Loss and Violence among Adolescent Female Offenders. Crit Crim 15, 19–40 (2007). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10612-006-9017-x

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