Does bad behaviour run in the family?

5 Jan 2015

University of Queensland research aims to answer the age-old question of whether anti-social behaviour is passed down through families.

Professor Jake Najman, from UQ’s School of Public Health  and School of Social Science, said the project was Australia’s first to examine anti-social behaviour across three generations to determine whether and to what extent poor behaviour of grandparents could be transmitted to grandchildren.

“While there’s a belief in society that criminal behaviour is transmitted across generations, in reality we have very little evidence to back up this stereotype and even less information about why this may occur,” Professor Najman said.

“Anti-social behaviour includes a range of activities such as smoking, alcohol misuse and violence, all of which are damaging to health and well-being.”

Professor Najman said he and his research colleagues would try to pinpoint whether exposure to certain factors might predict this.

“The long-term negative consequences of antisocial behaviour also include poor learning, unemployment, poor health and higher rates of imprisonment,” he said.

“Antisocial behaviour is a major social problem and our efforts to understand and address this problem have been of limited effectiveness.

“In particular, marriage instability, poverty and poor parenting have been linked to the development of anti-social behaviour and, by looking at three generations, this study allows us to better examine the impact of these and other critical factors.”

He said the research would also explore how patterns of anti-social behaviour had changed over time.

Professor Najman said the high economic and social cost of anti-social behaviour highlighted the need to know more about how and why it developed.

“The findings of this study may see anti-social families, rather than individuals, targeted for early intervention programs that may help reduce the incidence and impact of this behaviour,” he said.

The project will draw on data from the Mater-University of Queensland Study of Pregnancy (MUSP), an ongoing study of women and their children founded by Professor Najman in 1981. 

Professor Najman will lead the study with UQ SPH colleagues Professor Gail Williams, Associate Professor Abdullah Al Mamun, Associate Professor Rosa Alati, UQ School of Medicine Associate Professor James Scott and UQ School of Pharmacy Associate Professor Zandy Clavarino.

The research is being funded through the Australian Research Council.

MediaBernadette Condren, UQ Faculty of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences Media Manager, +61 3346 5309, 0413 881 597, b.condren@uq.edu.au

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