The timing and severity of antisocial behavior: Three hypotheses within an ecological framework

The goal of this chapter is to render an environmental explanation of the timing and severity of child and adolescent antisocial behavior that can be reorganized into 3 basic hypotheses: (1) the social interactional hypothesis: Antisocial behavior has a function within the individual’s immediate social environment; (2) the marginal deviation hypothesis: characteristics of the child can qualify the nature and saliency of social interactional processes; (3) the contextual sensitivity hypothesis: contexts largely define the form and function of antisocial behavior in relationships and potentially amplify characteristcis of the individual that interplay with social interactinal processes.

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