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Antisocial Behavior in Children and Adolescents: A Developmental Analysis and the Oregon Model for Intervention
Edited by John B. Reid, PhD; Gerald R. Patterson, PhD; and James J. Snyder, PhD

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LIST PRICE: $49.95
MEMBER/AFFILIATE PRICE: $39.95

337 pages
ITEM #: 431677A
ISBN: 1-55798-897-8
ISBN 13: 978-1-55798-897-3
PUBLICATION DATE: May 2002
EDITION: Hardcover

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This book is out of print and no longer available for purchase.

Modern theories of child development say that, to understand aggressive behavior, we must look within the child. This volume says otherwise: to change aggressive behavior, we must change the environment in which the child lives. Antisocial Behavior in Children and Adolescents lays out empirically proven approaches to reducing the occurrence and severity of antisocial behavior, beginning in the earliest years of childhood.

Written for an audience of applied researchers, clinical practitioners, community activists, and policy makers, this edited volume summarizes ongoing work at the Oregon Social Learning Center. Using coercion theory as an organizing framework, the book distills 30+ years of thinking and research at OSLC. Antisocial behavior is seen as progressing from dysfunctional parent-toddler interactions to similar interactions with teachers, peers, and others in the child's environment.

The contributors make a powerful argument for an approach that pinpoints the antecedents of antisocial behavior all the way from toddlerhood through adolescence. This book will be of interest to anyone concerned about the quantifiable losses associated with behaviors such as violence and crime, incarceration, vocational failure, substance abuse, the use of emergency services, and irresponsible sexual conduct.

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