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Featured researches published by Tia Stevens.


Justice Quarterly | 2011

Are Girls Getting Tougher, or Are We Tougher on Girls? Probability of Arrest and Juvenile Court Oversight in 1980 and 2000

Tia Stevens; Merry Morash; Meda Chesney-Lind

Girls suspected or convicted of assaults make up an increasing proportion of juvenile arrests and court caseloads. There is indication that changes in domestic violence arrest policies, school handling of student rules infractions, and practices of charging youth for assaults rather than status offenses account for these trends. To determine whether girls were treated more harshly for assaults after these policies changed, the present study compared the probabilities of conviction and institutionalization, net of the effect of self-reported attacks on persons, for 1980 and 2000. Data were from the National Longitudinal Surveys of Youth 1979 and 1997 cohorts. Girls experienced a unique increase in the probabilities of justice system involvement that was replicated only for Black males. The increase was magnified for Black girls. Additional research is needed to better connect specific policies to drawing selected subgroups more deeply into the justice system and on the consequences for affected youth.


Youth Violence and Juvenile Justice | 2010

Gender Differences in Predictors of Assaultive Behavior in Late Adolescence

Suyeon Park; Merry Morash; Tia Stevens

This article addresses controversy over gender differences in risk and protective factors for late-adolescence assaults. A secondary analysis of data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth, 1997 cohort considered 2,552 youth aged 12 or 13 in the first survey wave. Comparison of girls and boys revealed, as expected, boys had higher levels of risk factors: early delinquency, gang involvement, and hopelessness. Girls were higher in the protective factors, parental monitoring, and school and religious ties; but boys were higher in parental support and work involvement. Negative binomial regression showed that gang exposure and hopelessness explained assaults, regardless of gender. For girls, early runaway behavior and work activity were positively, and parental monitoring was negatively, related to assaults. Unexpectedly, boys with high parental support were more assaultive than others. Prevention requires addressing negative contexts for all youth, but for girls, programs also must address conditions promoting their running away.


Youth Violence and Juvenile Justice | 2015

Racial/ethnic disparities in boys' probability of arrest and court actions in 1980 and 2000: the disproportionate impact of "getting tough'' on crime

Tia Stevens; Merry Morash

This study was designed to examine whether the shift in juvenile justice policy toward punitive sanctioning disproportionately impacted racial and ethnic minority boys. Using a nationally representative sample derived from the National Longitudinal Surveys of Youth 1979 and 1997 (NLSY79, NLSY97), this study examines 1980–2000 differences in contact with the justice system, controlling for self-reported delinquency. Results confirmed that boys in 2000 were significantly more likely than those in 1980 to report being charged with a crime. Once charged, they were less likely to be diverted and more likely to be convicted and placed in a correctional institution. Consideration of interaction effects revealed these effects were magnified for Black and Hispanic males. These findings provide evidence of a general trend toward more punitive treatment of boys in the juvenile justice system, especially racial and ethnic minority boys.


Violence Against Women | 2008

Getting Out of Harm's Way One-Year Outcomes for Abused Women in a Vietnamese Immigrant Enclave

Merry Morash; Hoan Bui; Tia Stevens; Yunlong Zhang

The study identifies predictors of womens remaining entangled in abusive relationships. The sample includes 57 women in one Vietnamese American enclave. Womens beliefs in maintaining an intact family, patriarchal decision making, and fear of their partners characterized women remaining. To a lesser extent, seeking help from a variety of places characterized women who escaped, and concern with achieving important goals, number of children, financial dependence, lack of support, and legal marriage characterized women who remained. Discussion centers on how social and legal services can meet the unique needs of women with circumstances similar to those who participated in the study.


Youth & Society | 2011

Late-Adolescent Delinquency: Risks and Resilience for Girls Differing in Risk at the Start of Adolescence

Tia Stevens; Merry Morash; Suyeon Park

Based on resilience and feminist criminological theories, several individual, family, and community characteristics were hypothesized to predict late-adolescent delinquency for girls varying in early-adolescent risk. Girls aged 12 and 13 were interviewed each year as part of the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1997. Predictors of late-adolescent delinquency were compared for girls in and below the top 10% in self-reported early-adolescent delinquency. Girls who were higher in delinquency in early adolescence were resilient by 2002 if they had no incarcerated family members and high parental monitoring. Girls with little or no early delinquency were at risk for illegal activity by age 17 primarily due to contextual adversities, low hope for the future, poverty status, and minority racial status. Persistently delinquent girls require programming to address multiple risk and protective factors over an extended time. To prevent delinquency beginning later in adolescence, girls need safe community and school contexts.


Feminist Criminology | 2014

Focus on the Family: Juvenile Court Responses to Girls and Their Caretakers

Merry Morash; Tia Stevens; Julie Yingling

Interviews with 27 girls and the professionals who worked with them yielded retrospective accounts of court interventions into families. Contradicting prior criticisms, for the setting and sample, girls were not confined to control sexual activity or as punishment for crimes committed after they ran from abusive families. Intervention problems included holding girls responsible for fighting with physically abusive caretakers, and electronically forced presence in homes with destructive caretakers. Family counseling benefitted girls with troubled families. Independent living benefited those with intractably destructive families. The research generated contemporary local information about broad criticisms leveled against juvenile courts’ responses to girls.


Australian and New Zealand Journal of Criminology | 2008

Girls' Troubles, Girls' Delinquency, and Gender Responsive Programming: A Review

Meda Chesney-Lind; Merry Morash; Tia Stevens


Archive | 2012

The Roles of School-Level and Neighborhood-Level Characteristics in Explaining Delinquency and Involvement with the Criminal Justice System: A Cross-Classified Multilevel Analysis

Tia Stevens; Merry Morash


Archive | 2011

Cosas políticas: Politics, attitudes, and perceptions by region

Arturo Vega; Rubén O. Martinez; Tia Stevens


Archive | 2010

The Impact of Common Policies on Girls in Trouble

Tia Stevens; Julie Yingling; Merry Morash

Collaboration


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Merry Morash

Michigan State University

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Meda Chesney-Lind

University of Hawaii at Manoa

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Julie Yingling

South Dakota State University

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Suyeon Park

Michigan State University

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Hoan Bui

University of Tennessee

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Yunlong Zhang

Sam Houston State University

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