Factors that distinguish aggression toward animals from other antisocial behaviors: evidence from a community sample
2018
Animal cruelty is a form of passive and active aggression that is largely undocumented and
unreported. Given that animals are voiceless victims, we have to rely on witnesses and
frontline staff (e.g., veterinarians) to report incidents of abuse, which suggests the number of
convicted animal abusers is an under-representation of actual perpetrators. The primary aim
of the current study was to identify the static and dynamic factors that distinguish animal
abusers from non-abuse offenders (i.e., individuals who self-reported antisocial behavior, but
not animal abuse), and non-offenders (i.e., individuals who have not engaged in any
antisocial behavior) in a community sample. The secondary aim was to identify the potential
pathways that distinguish animal abuse perpetration from other types of antisocial behavior.
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