Boys at Risk Publications
The following articles are linked to sites which will require payment for downloading. If you do not have access to a database permitting downloading without charge, you may contact the Santa Fe Boys Educational Foundation here with a message specifying the title of the material you would like.
Early Origins of Male Violence
The Infant Mental Health Journal—the official journal of the World Association for Infant Mental Health—has published a special issue on the topic of the Early Biopsychosocial Development of Boys and the Origins of Violence in Males. The publication is the scholarly basis of the conference. It follows an earlier journal publication related to this subject of boys at risk in early life that can be accessed here. Some of the contributors and titles to the January 2019 publication follow (access article by clicking on title):
- Kenneth Corvo, University of Syracuse, Early life risk for domestic violence perpetration: Implications for practice and policy
- Andrea Glenn, University of Alabama, Early life predictors of callous-unemotional and psychopathic traits
- Paul Golding, Santa Fe Boys Educational Foundation & Hiram Fitzgerald, Michigan State University, The early biopsychosocial development of boys and the origins of violence in males
- Jorge Garcia, James Heckman, & Anna Ziff, University of Chicago, Early childhood education and crime
- Sara Jaffee, University of Pennsylvania, Lead exposure and child maltreatment as models for how to conceptualize early-in-life risk factors for violence
- Sarah Terrell & Elisabeth Conradt, University of Utah, Lynn Dansereau, Linda LaGrasse, & Barry Lester, Brown University, A developmental origins perspective on the emergence of violent behavior in males with prenatal substance exposure
- Richard Mizen, University of Exeter, The affective basis of violence
- Adrian Raine, University of Pennsylvania, A neurodevelopmental perspective on male violence
- Stephanie Sitnick, Caldwell University, Cardee Galan & Daniel Shaw, University of Pittsburgh, Early childhood predictors of boys’ antisocial and violent behavior in early adulthood
- Richard E. Tremblay & Sylvana Cote, University of Montreal, Sex differences in the development of physical aggression: An intergenerational perspective and implications for preventive interventions
- Shannon Savell, Sean Womack, & Melvin Wilson, University of Virginia, Daniel Shaw, University of Pittsburgh, Thomas Dishion, Arizona State University, Considering the role of early discrimination experiences and the parent-child relationship in the development of disruptive behaviors in adolescence
Boys at Risk: Indicators from Birth to Five
The Infant Mental Health Journal—the official journal of the World Association for Infant Mental Health—published a special issue on the topic of Boys at Risk: Indictors from Birth to Five. The publication was the scholarly basis of the conference. The contributors and titles to this January 2017 publication follow (access article by clicking on title):
Psychology of Boys at Risk: Indicators From 0–5
PAUL GOLDING AND HIRAM E. FITZGERALD • 5
All Our Sons: The Developmental Neurobiology and Neuroendocrinology of Boys at Risk
ALLAN N. SCHORE • 15
Associations Between Early Maternal Depressive Symptom Trajectories and Toddlers’ Felt Security at 18 Months: Are Boys and Girls at Differential Risk?
MARJORIE BEEGHLY, TY PARTRIDGE, ED TRONICK, MARIA MUZIK, MAHYA RAHIMIAN MASHHADI, JORDAN L. BOEVE, AND JESSICA L. IRWIN • 53
Early Childhood Predictors of Low-Income Boys’ Pathways to Antisocial Behavior in Childhood, Adolescence, and Early Adulthood
DANIEL S. SHAW AND MARY GILLIAM • 68
Boys, Early Risk Factors for Alcohol Problems, and the Development of the Self: An Interconnected Matrix
LEON I. PUTTLER, HIRAM E. FITZGERALD, MARY M. HEITZEG, AND ROBERT A. ZUCKER • 83
The Early Home Environment of Latino Boys and Their Peers: A Developmental Perspective
NATASHA J. CABRERA, JENESSA L. MALIN, CATHERINE KUHNS, AND JERRY WEST • 97
American Indian and Alaska Native Boys: Early Childhood Risk and Resilience Amidst Context and Culture
MICHELLE SARCHE, GREG TAFOYA, CALVIN D. CROY, AND KYLE HILL • 115
Predictors of Infant and Toddler Black Boys’ Early Learning: Seizing Opportunities and Minimizing Risks
IHEOMA U. IRUKA • 128
Reflecting on the Practice of Infant Mental Health and the Reduction of Risk in Infancy and Early Parenthood: An Essay
DEBORAH J. WEATHERSTON • 143
Development and Socialization of Physical Aggression in Very Young Boys
CAROLYN JOY DAYTON AND JOHANNA C. MALONE • 150
Public Policy, Child Development Research and Boys at Risk: Challenging, Enduring and Necessary Partnership
MARVIN McKINNEY, HIRAM E. FITZGERALD, DONNA-MARIE WINN, AND PATRICK BABCOCK • 166