Dr. Shari Miller received her doctorate in Clinical Psychology from the University of Virginia in 1991. She is a research psychologist in RTI’s Crime, Violence, and Justice Program. Dr. Miller’s primary focus is on youth violence and delinquency. Specific activities include basic research, prevention and intervention, and program evaluation. Her major research interests include design, implementation, and evaluation of delinquency and youth violence interventions; adolescent problem behaviors (including substance use, teen pregnancy, and high-risk sexual behaviors); service delivery systems related to the mental health needs of juvenile justice youth; pathways and risk processes leading to adolescent problem behaviors; the intersection of maltreatment and delinquency; and violence and delinquency among girls. She received a Career Development Award from the National Institutes of Mental Health to study the development, processes, and mechanisms of girls’ antisocial behavior.
Dr. Leslie Leve received her doctorate in Developmental Psychology from the University of Oregon in 1995. She is a Senior Scientist at the Oregon Social Learning Center and at the Center for Research to Practice in Eugene, OR. Dr. Leve’s work has focused on the development of effective treatment models for youth in foster care and youth in the juvenile justice system. She has served as an investigator on 12 research grants funded by the National Institutes of Health, including longitudinal studies of normative developmental processes and randomized preventive intervention trials with at risk populations. She currently directs a randomized intervention trial designed to prevent the onset of delinquency among girls in foster care as they enter middle school. Dr. Leve has published numerous articles and chapters in the areas of child development and Multidimensional Treatment Foster Care.
Dr. Patricia Kerig received her Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology from the University of California at Berkeley in 1989. Currently, she is a Professor and the Director of Clinical Training in the Department of Psychology at the University of Utah. Her research focuses on developmental psychopathology in the context of the family, and she is the author of a number of books, chapters, and empirical articles concerning risk and resilience in children and adolescents exposed to family violence, interparental conflict, child maltreatment, and trauma. Her most recent research projects concern understanding the underlying mechanisms that link trauma, PTSD, and juvenile delinquency, as well as developing empirically-supported strategies for integrated trauma-informed and family systems approaches for diverting traumatized youth from a delinquent pathway.
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Shari Miller & Leslie D. Leve: Delinquent Girls
Traditionally, delinquent girls were considered an anomaly, a rare phenomenon attracting little scholarly notice. Today, more than one in four youth offenders is female, and researchers and practitio …
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