People with Dark Triad traits are less likely to engage in intimate partner violence when they have higher levels of emotion regulation and empathic concern (modifiable factors)
According to the first of today's Five Studies About: College Students
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 college students.

These new crime studies related to college students were recently published by journals I monitor:
1. Do Emotion Regulation and Empathic Concern Moderate the Association Between Dark Triad Traits and Intimate Partner Violence? [Journal of Interpersonal Violence]
2. We Need Olivia Benson: College Student and Employee Perspectives on Norms and Beliefs About Sexual Violence [Journal of Interpersonal Violence]
3. College students’ attitudes towards individuals convicted of a sexual offense [Criminal Justice Studies]
4. Cyberbullying Victim-Offender Overlap Among Chinese College Students: Comparing the Predictive Effects Across Criminological Factors [Victims & Offenders]
5. The Impact of a University Sexual Assault Prevention Program on Student Comfort With Help-Seeking [Violence Against Women]
I might cover some of these studies further in The Practice of Understanding Crime, my newsletter where I report on criminology and criminal justice research. 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.