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Journal of Interpersonal Violence
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The Developmental Epidemiology of Childhood Victimization

David Finkelhor

University of New Hampshire, david.finkelhor{at}unh.edu

Richard K. Ormrod

University of New Hampshire

Heather A. Turner

University of New Hampshire

This article examines developmental trends in the rates of different kinds of victimization across the span of childhood. The Developmental Victimization Survey was a national telephone survey of the victimization experiences of 2,030 children from ages 2 to 17. The overall mean number of victimizations during a single year increased with age, as did the percentage of children with polyvictimizations (4 or more different kinds of victimization). However, some specific types of victimization, physical bullying and sibling assaults, were highest prior to adolescence and then declined. Other types had different developmental patterns by gender. Peer assaults increased in adolescence for boys but not for girls. Child maltreatment and sexual victimization increased in adolescence for girls but not for boys. The complex and diverse patterns of developmental vulnerability to different kinds of victimization at different ages need more exploration and explanation in order to better target prevention and intervention policies.

Key Words: child abuse • child maltreatment • sexual assault • crime • bullying

This version was published on May 1, 2009

Journal of Interpersonal Violence, Vol. 24, No. 5, 711-731 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/0886260508317185


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