RT Article T1 The pathways to desistance: a longitudinal study of juvenile delinquency JF Deviant behavior VO 41 IS 1 SP 87 OP 102 A1 Lee, Wanhee A2 Moon, Junseob A2 Garcia, Venessa LA English YR 2020 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1859270336 AB Although longitudinal studies of developmental trajectories of juvenile offending have been ongoing for over two decades, longitudinal studies on desistance trajectories are lacking. The purpose of this study is to identify adolescents who desist from delinquent behaviors while still in their adolescence. The study also examines the roles of parental attachment and low self-control in the prediction of identified desistance pathways using data from the Korean Youth Panel Study (KYPS), a five-year longitudinal study of South Korean youth. In an analysis of latent growth model, this study suggests that low self-control is strongly related to juvenile desistance trajectories. In addition, there is evidence of an indirect relationship between parental attachment and desistance. The results from this analysis will be examined in light of previous findings. Theoretical and policy implications are discussed. NO Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 100-102 K1 Desistance K1 Jugendkriminalität K1 Korea DO 10.1080/01639625.2018.1519138