RT Article T1 Association between childhood adversity and criminal thinking: the role of attachment JF Psychology, crime & law VO 27 IS 8 SP 796 OP 814 A1 Yang, Yang A1 Perkins, David Rick A2 Perkins, David Rick LA English YR 2021 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/176838536X AB The current cross-sectional study adopted structural equation modeling (SEM) to examine the association between childhood adversity and criminal thinking, and the role of attachment being a mediator in this relationship, in an offending sample. Data were collected from a sample of 209 inmates (169 of which were male) in a local jail. The results of SEM analyses indicated that childhood adversity was positively associated with attachment anxiety, attachment avoidance, and criminal thinking. Attachment avoidance was positively associated with criminal thinking and mediated the influence of childhood adversity on criminal thinking. Specifically, greater childhood adversity predicted higher attachment avoidance, which in turn was associated with higher levels of criminal thinking. Attachment anxiety did not correlate with criminal thinking; nor did it mediate the influence of childhood adversity on criminal thinking. The findings suggested that childhood adversity and insecure attachment are important risk factors in treating criminal thinking. Practitioners may consider incorporating therapies that facilitate self-reflective functions into offender rehabilitation programs or offer a taste of secure base for justice-involved individuals with childhood adversity. K1 Jail inmates K1 Criminal thinking K1 attachment avoidance K1 attachment anxiety K1 childhood adversity DO 10.1080/1068316X.2020.1850724