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Delinquent Decision-Making and Behaviors among Adolescent Females

Sexual Minority Status, Abuse, and Self-Harming Behaviors among Incarcerated Girls

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Pages 173-185 | Received 03 Jan 2011, Accepted 03 Feb 2012, Published online: 08 May 2012
 

Abstract

This self-report study of 404 incarcerated youth found extraordinarily high rates of sexual minority status (SMS; i.e., lesbian/gay or bisexual) among the girls, particularly girls of color. Further analyses of the 107 girls 16 and older found that SMS girls reported being the victims of abuse and engaging in self-harming behaviors more than non-SMS (straight) girls. Structural equation models indicated that regardless of sexual identity, abuse was a risk factor for self-harming. This relationship held for physical or sexual abuse and for abuse by family members or people outside the family. Relative to non-SMS girls, SMS girls demonstrated higher rates of sexual abuse, primarily family sexual abuse, which mediated the relationship between SMS and self-harming.

Acknowledgements

This paper was funded in part by the Office of Criminal Justice Services in Columbus, Ohio, and was presented at the 2010 Annual Meeting of the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies in Montreal. The authors are indebted to the girls and boys who took part in our survey and to Drs. Patricia Kerig and Louise Silvern, Mr. David Butler, and the anonymous reviewers for advice regarding parts of this paper. Any limitations are the authors' responsibility.

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