How high psychopathy scores in young women are related to repeat intimate partner violence victimization
According to the first of today's Five Studies About: Psychopathy
Hello! I'm Aaron Jacklin, and this is The Art of Explaining Crime, an independent newsletter that helps you think and write about crime.
Published Tuesdays and Thursdays, Five Studies About is a free tip sheet where I curate recent crime and justice studies related to one topic. Today’s topic is : psychopathy.

These new crime studies related to psychopathy were recently published by journals I monitor:
1. Psychopathy checklist‐youth version scores and recurring victimisation by an intimate partner in a justice‐involved sample: A comparison of young men and women using longitudinal data [Criminal Behaviour and Mental Health]
2. Pathways from Childhood Emotional Neglect to Traditional Victimization among Secondary Vocational School Students: The Roles of Family Functioning, Psychopathy, and Socioeconomic Status [Journal of Interpersonal Violence]
3. Completing the Deficit Model of Psychopathy: The Critical Role of Rule Governance [Criminal Justice and Behavior]
4. The Role of Psychopathic Traits in Subtypes of Family Homicide [Deviant Behavior]
5. A narrative review of psychopathy research: current advances and the argument for a qualitative approach [The Journal of Forensic Psychiatry & Psychology]
I might cover some of these studies further in The Practice of Understanding Crime, my other newsletter. If any sound interesting or important, let me know in the comments.
Five Studies About and Crime Research Update are the output of my research discovery system.