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The role of emotional resilience, childhood parentification, and attachment style on antisocial behaviour in adulthood: a comparison of an offender and normative population

Andra McGauran (National Probation Service, Preston, UK)
Matthew Brooks (Department of Psychology, Manchester Metropolitan University, Manchester, UK)
Roxanne Khan (Department of Psychology, University of Central Lancashire, Preston, UK)

Journal of Criminal Psychology

ISSN: 2009-3829

Article publication date: 2 April 2019

Issue publication date: 26 April 2019

1232

Abstract

Purpose

Despite a robust link between poor caregiver attachment and antisociality, few studies have examined the influence of parentification and emotional resilience on delinquency in later life, in groups at differing risk for antisocial conduct. The paper aims to discuss these issues.

Design/methodology/approach

This pilot study compared the influence of parentification, attachment style (avoidance or anxious) and emotional resilience on adulthood antisocial behaviour in an offender and normative sample. Of the 137 participants in this study, 66 were supervised by the National Probation Service (age M=36.90, SD=13.91), and 71 were recruited from community-dwelling and student populations (age M=31.83, SD=13.25).

Findings

In partial support of the predictions, participants in the offender group reported significantly greater levels of attachment anxiety compared to the normative group. However, emotional resilience was positively associated with antisociality in the normative sample.

Research limitations/implications

This small-scale investigation indicates value in exploring these specific variables in a larger, matched samples study, to enable clearer comparisons to be made between offender and normative groups.

Practical implications

The preliminary findings suggest that attachment anxiety is associated with antisociality in offender populations, which indicate a therapeutic focus on attachment anxiety as part of correctional care and offender rehabilitation.

Originality/value

This study is novel in its aim to examine the influence of childhood parentification, attachment deficits and emotional resilience on adulthood antisociality in participants from a high-risk offender sample and non-high-risk normative sample.

Keywords

Citation

McGauran, A., Brooks, M. and Khan, R. (2019), "The role of emotional resilience, childhood parentification, and attachment style on antisocial behaviour in adulthood: a comparison of an offender and normative population", Journal of Criminal Psychology, Vol. 9 No. 2, pp. 75-87. https://doi.org/10.1108/JCP-08-2018-0035

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2019, Emerald Publishing Limited

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