Abstract Early-life adversities contribute to adolescent criminal behavior, but whether such adversities are linked only to specific crime types remains unclear. Drawing from a developmental and life-course criminology perspective and the adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) framework, this study compared the effects of early-life adversities on youth criminal behavior across different crimes. Using the register data of Finnish children born between 1987 and 2000 ( N = 835,512), a series of negative binomial regression analyses were conducted to study the associations between adversities experienced during childhood (0–14 years) and involvement in crimes during adolescence (15–20 years). The crimes studied included violent crimes, frauds, other property crimes, driving under the influence, traffic crimes, sexual offenses, drug-related offenses, and vandalism. Our findings suggest that ACEs—as measured by parental hospitalization due to substance abuse or mental health problems, parental conviction for a violent crime, parental death, parental unemployment, and parental receipt of social assistance—are linked to all types of criminal behavior instead of specific offenses, with parental violence and parental receipt of social assistance having the strongest associations. The accumulation of ACEs, we found, increased the likelihood of committing each of the studied crimes. Our findings demonstrate how ACEs can disrupt a child’s development in ways that are associated with a broad range of criminal behavior later in life and how crime distribution mirrors socioeconomic disparities. Additionally, our findings highlight the importance of trauma-informed interventions and general crime prevention strategies in addressing the long-term effects of early-life adversities on criminal behavior.
Vepsäläinen et al. (Fri,) studied this question.