P. Rantakallio et al., JUVENILE-OFFENDERS, WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO SEX-DIFFERENCES, Social psychiatry and psychiatric epidemiology, 30(3), 1995, pp. 113-120
Social and demographic background variables relevant to male and femal
e juvenile offenders were studied prospectively in a geographically de
fined population of 6,007 males and 5,757 females in Northern Finland,
together with the distribution of offences by type and number between
the sexes. Up to the age of 25 years, 532 males (8.9%) and 60 females
(1.0%) had committed at least one crime leading to a criminal record.
An intelligence quotient (IQ) of 50-84, but not below 50, was most cl
osely associated with delinquency, as was school performance, in that
not only was poor attainment associated with an increased incidence of
delinquency, but above-average attainment was also predictive of a lo
wer incidence. This is not interpreted as a causal association but rat
her an indication of similarity between the demands of the educational
system and demands regarding socially desirable behaviour. The demogr
aphic, social, educational and health factors predictive of delinquenc
y were very similar for males and females, and the reasons for the dif
ference in the incidence of delinquency between the sexes must be look
ed for among the general differences in cultural demands and biologica
l factors.