Juvenile offenders Books
Harvard University Press Rethinking Juvenile Justice
Book SynopsisWhat should we do with teens who commit crimes? Two leading scholars in law and adolescent development argue that juvenile justice should be grounded in the best available psychological science, which shows that adolescence is a distinctive state of cognitive and emotional development.Trade ReviewAmerica's justice system has become increasingly punitive toward our teenagers during past 25 years. Terrifying terms like "super predator," "zero tolerance" and "vicious youth gangs" are part of our everyday speech. But as Scott and Steinberg show, new neuroscientific and psychological evidence challenges the punitive approach. The book combines rigorous science and impeccable legal scholarship, with forceful prose, to argue for a wholesale reform of the juvenile justice system. -- Terrie Moffitt, Duke University and King's College LondonScott and Steinberg, leading figures in juvenile law and adolescent developmental psychology, have joined forces to argue that now is the moment to reconstitute, in a completely original way, how America deals with juvenile crime and juvenile offenders. At once deeply learned and altogether pragmatic, Rethinking Juvenile Justice is one of the most transformative books this field has seen in the past 20 years. -- John Monahan, Shannon Distinguished Professor of Law, University of VirginiaThe subject of juvenile justice breeds extreme responses. The academic sensibility is extremely lenient, seeing misguided kids who need understanding and help more than punishment. The legal system is mindlessly punitive: juvenile defendants in the US are treated more harshly than adults elsewhere in the Western world. In the midst of this crazy conversation, Scott and Steinberg are voices of sanity. Their wholly novel approach to juvenile crime will make equal sense to judges, juvenile advocates, and urban police forces. This book is a terrific example of what speaking truth to power, effectively, looks like. -- William Stuntz, Harvard Law SchoolThis multidisciplinary book is exactly what policy makers should consult when thinking about ways to change a system that is in dire need of repair. -- D. S. Mann * Choice *What distinguishes this book from other writings in the field are not the proposals made, which are relatively modest, but rather the developmental sophistication with which they are defended. And in the end, the hard questions the book raises are not about juvenile justice policy, but rather about the interrelationship between law and science. Offering us the gold standard in legal-developmental collaboration, it presses us to consider the role the developmental sciences should play in shaping the law affecting children...What makes the book so valuable is that it can be relied upon by judges, legislatures, lawyers, and policymakers to enhance the sophistication with which they consider the very issues that they are currently being called on to decide. In this sense, Rethinking Juvenile Justice is a complete success. Lawmakers already look to Scott and Steinberg's earlier work when they address how the law should respond to juvenile crime, and this book should only enhance the sophistication of those lawmaking efforts...Rethinking Juvenile Justice promises to enhance the sophistication of those addressing juvenile justice policy on a broad range of issues. -- Emily Buss * University of Chicago Law Review *[Scott and Steinberg] believe that new juvenile justice reforms that publicize available scientific developmental data and empirical data demonstrating savings in recidivism and costs due to keeping kids in the juvenile system will be successful. They believe that we can avoid the demolition of the courts or at least staunch the loss of so many young offenders from the courts' jurisdiction...This book is one of the very few works that provides legal and developmental analyses and offers politically savvy advice about implementing a successful legislative strategy...This is a book that everyone should read. -- Lucy S. McGough * Law and Politics Book Review *Table of Contents* Introduction: The Challenge of Lionel Tate * The Science of Adolescent Development and Teens' Involvement in Crime * Regulating Children in American Law: The State as Parent and Protector * Why Crime Is Different * Immaturity and Mitigation * Developmental Competence and the Adjudication of Juveniles * Social Welfare and Juvenile Crime Regulation * The Developmental Model and Juvenile Justice Policy for the Twenty-First Century * Is Society Ready for Juvenile Justice Reform? * Notes * Acknowledgments * Index
£24.26
Pan Macmillan Young Offender: My Life from Armed Robber to
Book Synopsis'A memoir to shine a light in the darkest of nights . . . a story of redemption' – journalist Tony Parsons.Michael Maisey was excited the day he was locked up in the notorious Feltham Young Offenders Institute. He was going to be a legend to all his mates. The sixteen year old was in for attempted murder. He was innocent of this particular crime but amongst the violent and dangerous young men on his wing he was about to learn exactly how far he’d go to survive.In Young Offender we see what turned a good kid into a wanted criminal. Abused by his uncle, bullied at school, at the age of twelve he found the safety he craved in the ranks of a local gang in West London. He graduated from shoplifting to armed robbery and for five years Michael was in and out of Feltham, on a downward spiral of crime and drug and alcohol addiction. At rock bottom, he began attending AA meetings. But the road to recovery would mean changing himself in the deepest possible ways. Could Michael finally learn what it meant to be a good man?Honest and inspiring, this is a powerful story of redemption. Today Michael is a successful businessman and a loving father who spends time helping others find their way.'Courageous and brutally honest' – Ollie Ollerton, ex-Special Forces soldier, author of Break Point.Trade ReviewCourageous and brutally honest -- Ollie Ollerton, author of Break PointYoung Offender is a memoir to shine a light in the darkest of nights, a harrowing, heart breaking autobiography that feels like it was written in tears and blood. Michael Maisey crawled from the wreckage of what feels like every bad break in the world – domestic violence, sexual abuse, drugs, alcohol, incarceration and cruelty that staggers the mind - emerging with a story of redemption, hope and love. -- Tony ParsonsI loved everything about this book . . . There is such hope here. If one young man can make these changes, and inspire others to create value with their own lives too, then maybe we all can. * Stella Duffy *
£8.99
Taylor & Francis Ltd Environment and Society
Book SynopsisEnvironment and Society relates to a diverse audience and encompasses viewpoints from a variety of natural and social science approaches. This integrative book about human-environment relations connects many issues about human societies, ecological systems, and environments with data and perspectives from different fields of study. Its viewpoint is primarily sociological and it is designed for courses in Environmental Sociology and Environmental Issues, or taught in departments of Sociology, Environmental Studies, Anthropology, Political Science, and Human Geography.Table of Contents 1. Environment, Human Systems, and Social Science 2. Humans and the Resources of the Earth: Sources and Sinks 3. Global Climate Change 4. Energy and Society 5. Population, Environment, and Food 6. Globalization, Growth, and Sustainability 7. Transforming Structures. Markets and Politics 8. Environmentalism. Ideology and Collective Action
£79.79
Oxford University Press Inc The War on Kids
Book SynopsisIn 2003, when he was sixteen, Terrence Graham and three other teens attempted to rob a barbeque restaurant in Jacksonville, Florida. Though they left with no money, and no one was seriously injured, Terrence was sentenced to die in prison for his involvement in that crime.As shocking as Terrence''s sentence sounds, it is merely a symptom of contemporary American juvenile justice practices. Today in this country, adolescents are routinely transferred out of juvenile court and into adult criminal court without any judicial oversight. Once in adult court, children can be sentenced without regard for their youth. Juveniles are housed in adult correctional facilities; they may be held in solitary confinement; and they experience the highest rates of sexual and physical assault among inmates. Until 2005, children convicted in America''s courts were subject to the death penalty; today, they still may be sentenced to die in prison - no matter what efforts they make to rehabilitate themselves. Trade ReviewConcluding with Drinan's suggested reforms to the juvenile justice system as it exists in America, The War on Kids accomplishes its stated ends. Drinan successfully articulates and explains, through the use of empirical data and real-world examples, the shortcomings of American juvenile justice. * Kamryn Gallardo, Journal of Youth and Adolescence *this book is highly recommended for readers who are interested in an accessible yet comprehensive book about the juvenile justice system in the U.S. * Rong Bai and Robert Fischer, Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare *This is a well-written book that conveys the harsh reality of criminal justice practices and legal doctrines in a way accessible to non-lawyers and the broader public. * Criminal Law and Criminal Justice Books *Table of ContentsIntroduction Chapter One: Pioneer to Pariah: The Arc of American Juvenile Justice Chapter Two: Crime as a Child's Destiny Chapter Three: Legal and Policy Paths to Juvenile Incarceration Chapter Four: Life While Down Chapter Five: Progress and Hope from the Nation's High Court Chapter Six: The Uneven and Unpredictable Path of Implementation Chapter Seven: A War for Kids
£22.32
Oxford University Press Inc The Myth of the Community Fix Inequality and the
Book SynopsisTrade ReviewThe Myth of the Community Fix takes its reader deep into the guts of youth criminal reform that transfers justice to counties which in turn subcontract it to private foundations and operators. We discover how, in the name of "reform," administrative devolution translates into increased punishment, reduced rights, continuing abuse, and public irresponsibility while reinforcing individualized conceptions of crime. Cate makes an original contribution to the sociology of the penal state that is sure to stimulate further research and public debate. * Loïc Wacquant, author of Punishing the Poor and The Invention of the "Underclass" *The Myth of the Community Fix is a crucial and timely intervention in the criminal justice reform conversation in the United States. Cate uniquely analyzes juvenile justice policy alongside trends in the US political economy. The case studies of popular bipartisan reforms in California, Pennsylvania, and Texas reveal that our long-term disinvestment in public goods leads local governments and community-based organizations to maintain or expand carceral capacity in the name of reform. This book challenges anyone concerned about mass incarceration to craft solutions that disrupt punitive political culture rather than reinforce the status quo. * Heather Schoenfeld, author of Building the Prison State *Sarah Cate's rich analysis shows how the community-control movement in juvenile justice reproduced the same problems of state-based institutions, but with even less political accountability. Situating juvenile justice reform within transformations in American political economy, such as privatization and welfare retrenchment, Cate reveals that devolution of juvenile institutions from state to county level control has been part of, not an alternative to, divestment from the public sector. This book is a devastating indictment of community-control models and a call to action for meaningful investment in public goods. * Lisa Miller, author of The Myth of Mob Rule *It is recommended for libraries serving departments of political science, social work, and sociology. * Choice *Table of ContentsIntroduction: The Limits of the Community-Based Reform Movement: Evidence from Pennsylvania, California and Texas Chapter 1: Abandoning Public Goods: The Turn to Community in the Context of Inequality Chapter 2: Devolution, Not Decarceration: Expanding Punishment Closer to Home Chapter 3: Privatizing Punishment: Consequences of Foundation-Led Policymaking Chapter 4: The Individual Focus: The Limits of Behavioral Solutions to Structural Problems Chapter 5: Still Punitive: Rationalizing Punishment for the 'Worst of the Worst' Conclusion: Bringing Public Goods Back In References Index
£20.99
The University of Chicago Press The Changing Borders of Juvenile Justice
Book SynopsisThis book discusses policy, substantive procedural and empirical dimensions of waivers, and where the boundaries of the courts lie. It provides an overview of the origins and development of law and contemporary policy, examines the effects of jurisdictional shifts and offers insights into reforms.
£58.58
The University of Chicago Press Changing Lives Delinquency Prevention as
Book SynopsisHistorically, it has been difficult to measure the impact of policies and programs designed to address juvenile crime. The most commonly used strategies for combating juvenile delinquency have primarily relied on intuition and fads. This book presents methods that can remedy these deficiencies in our juvenile justice system.Trade Review"In Changing Lives, Peter Greenwood sifts through a massive and disparate body of literature on delinquency prevention programs to identify those programs that appear to have promise. In the course of this study, he never shies away from making candid assessments about why policymakers have continued to support ineffective programs." - Barry Krisberg, president, National Council on Crime and Delinquency"
£18.00
The University of Chicago Press Youth on Trial A Developmental Perspective on
Book SynopsisIt is often said that a teen old enough to do the crime is old enough to do the time, but are teens mature and capable enough to participate in adult criminal court? In this book, leaders in developmental psychology and law combine their expertise to investigate the limitations of youth policy.
£24.70
The University of Chicago Press Double Jeopardy Adolescent Offenders with Mental
Book SynopsisProvides a scientific and practical foundation for lawmakers, judges, attorneys, and mental health care professionals in mental health and adolescent development. Dealing with the nature of mental disorders in youth, this book examines their relationship to delinquency, the limits of treatment methods, and related patterns of adolescent offending.Trade Review"This book systematically reviews, dissects, and makes sense out of what are currently disparate bodies of information dealing with difficult legal issues, assessments of treatment interventions, complex research findings, and confusing policy questions. In Double Jeopardy, [Grisso] has provided a road map and guidance to the entire field for our continuing efforts in the future to fulfill our obligation to society and to these youths." - Joseph J. Cocozza, director, National Center for Mental Health and Juvenile Justice"
£26.60
The University of Chicago Press Delinquency in a Birth Cohort Studies in Crime
Book SynopsisDelinquency in a Birth Cohort is a turning point in criminological research in the United States, writes Norval Morris in his foreword. What has been completely lacking until this book is an analysis of delinquency in a substantial cohort of youths, the cohort being defined other than by their contact with any part of the criminal justice system. This study of a birth cohort was not originally meant to be etiological or predictive. Yet the data bearing on this cohort of nearly ten thousand boys born in 1945 and living in Philadelphia gave rise to a model for prediction of delinquency, and thus to the possibility for more efficient planning of programs for intervention. It is expert research yielding significant applications and, though largely statistical, the analysis is accessible to readers without mathematical training. No serious scholar of the methods of preventing and treating juvenile delinquency can properly ignore this book.LeRoy L. Lamborn, Law Library Journal The magnitude
£34.20
The University of Chicago Press An American Travesty
Book SynopsisAnalyzes the justice system's response to sexual misconduct by children and adolescents in the United States. This book discusses our society's failure to consider the developmental status of adolescent sex offenders.Trade Review"An opinionated, articulate, and forceful critique of current politics and practices.... I would recommend this book for anyone interested in rethinking the fundamental questions of how our courts and systems should respond to these cases." - Law and Politics Book Review "One of the most important new books in the field of juvenile justice.... Zimring offers a thoughtful, research-based analysis of what went wrong with legal policy development." - Barry Krisberg, president, National Council on Crime and Delinquency "Franklin Zimring is one of the preeminent legal scholars in the United States today, and this exceptional, meticulous book shows why such status is so richly deserved." - Journal of Sociology and Social Welfare"
£76.00
Penguin Books Ltd The Young Accomplice
Book SynopsisTrade ReviewBritain's answer to Donna Tartt * Sunday Times *Tense and full of menace -- Johanna Thomas-Corr * New Statesman, Books of the Year *Highly accomplished . . . It's idealistic, gripping and beautifully textured, moving with great power. It's rare to see such attention to character and setting, and I think Wood is one of Britain's best young writers -- Philip Womack * Spectator, Best Books of 2022 *This satisfyingly old fashioned- feeling novel from a youngish author strikingly conveys its 1950s rural setting, and has a grim pull of foreboding . . . Benjamin Wood's perspective-shifting novel weaves elements ofthriller, romance and coming-of-age to gripping, memorable effect * Sunday Times, Best Books for the Year *A treat . . . Wood's daring narrative decisions show he hasn't lost the old spark, but has just added to it with his new repertoire. What, it asks, are the opportunities available to somoen who wants to leap clear of their wrong beginnings, when everything that hurts has already been cut? -- John Self * Critic, Fiction Books of the Year *Benjamin Wood knows how to generate tension, makes lively characters you can see and hear, and writes about rural England in a sensitive, considered way that doesn't stray into the nostalgic. A huge talent -- Hilary MantelWood is a seriously talented writer, able to enter the minds of his characters with eerie precision. The Young Accomplice is an involving tale of revenge and responsibility, which, while it devastates, also tells us that new lives can be built among the ashes * FT *[Wood's] best novel yet . . . [he] deserves to be far better known -- John Self * Irish Times, 2022 Books of the Year *A British novelist who deserves more attention than he has had . . . Wood blends storytelling punch with literary sensibility . . . The Young Accomplice shows the difference between a book that slides down the surface of things, and one that digs it claws into you and sticks there * The Times *Benjamin Wood is a beautiful writer and this is his best novel yet, both gripping and unputdownable. Like people in Thomas Hardy, his characters surge from the page, and the mystery unfolds with a sureness seldom seen in contemporary British fiction -- Andrew O’Hagan, author of MayfliesHis most original [novel] yet . . . The Young Accomplice has already been compared to Thomas Hardy novels and there are echoes of Tess of the d'Urbervilles in the story of a vulnerable young woman whose past catches up with her. Wood is also wonderful on the intricacies of love and architecture as a means of enriching people's lives. It's a novel that feels as if it has been imagined with slow and tender care - and I suspect it will be cherished by readers for a long time * Sunday Times *With deceptive ease, the books weaves elements of crime, mystery, love story and coming of age . . . a well-wrought novel whose pleasure is in each careful scene, moment and sentence * Irish Times *Blown away by A Station On The Path To Somewhere Better . . . Dark and disturbing, but wise, moving and beautifully written. Am immediately going to seek out his other books now. What a writer -- Richard Osman on A Station On The Path To Somewhere BetterBenjamin Wood is building a sublime body of work. This masterful, suspenseful novel is his best yet. It swallows you up. I love it -- David Whitehouse, author of About A SonA novelist to watch * The Times, on A Station on the Path to Somewhere Better *A resounding achievement . . . Rich, beautiful and written by an author of great depth and resource * Guardian, on The Ecliptic *Exhilarating, earthy, cerebral, frank and unflinching . . . A masterfully paced and suspenseful read * Independent, on The Ecliptic *
£9.49
Open University Press Social Work in the Youth Justice System A
Book SynopsisThis is a book for social workers working within the youth justice system; a highly demanding area of practice that requires a depth of knowledge and skill. All Youth Offending Teams are required to employ a social worker, yet it is often a challenge to find space within youth justice practice to uphold social work values. This practical book demonstrates how practitioners can work in creative, ethical and reflective ways within Youth Offending Teams.Topics include: Legislation Multiagency working Risk assessment Working with high risk offenders Alternative interventions Case studies, vignettes and reflective questions are used throughout to help students and practitioners relate theory directly to practice. "This book is an excellent introduction to the important contribution of social workers in the field of work with young offenders. Social work is a key profession in agencies working with such young people, especially in Youth Offending TeamsTable of ContentsCase StudyAbbreviationsIntroductionChapter 1: Welfare and Justice: victims and offendersChapter 2: LegislationChapter 3: Social Work in the Youth Justice System: a multi-disciplinary approachChapter 4: RiskChapter 5: AssessmentChapter 6: InterventionChapter 7: The Scaled Approach to Sentencing Disposals and SupervisionChapter 8: Going to CourtChapter 9: Restorative Justice InterventionsChapter 10: High Risk OffendersChapter 11: Alternative Interventions
£27.54
Taylor & Francis The Impact of Youth Imprisonment on the Lives of
Book SynopsisIt has long been argued that families play a crucial role in helping support prisoners during and beyond their time in prison. Through harnessing material and emotional support offered through family, prisoners can have a stronger commitment to move towards prosocial pathways via these important social ties. Yet, often overlooked are the experiences of families themselves in providing support for prisoners. This book focuses on parents whose adolescent male children are sent to prison. Charting many of the adversities which parents face â from violence, psychological stress, to stigma and shame â the book provides one of the first empirical assessments of the ways parents manage the consequences of serious crime and navigate relationships with their children in prison.As well as documenting major social hardships of imprisonment, the book will also assess the heterogeneous impacts on relationships between parents and their male children, including cases where relationships maTable of Contents1.Introduction 2.The Complexity of Youth-Parent Relationships 3.Parent-Child Lives Before Prison 4.The Challenges of Visitation 5.Adapting and Coping with Imprisonment 6.Conclusion
£128.25
Taylor & Francis Ltd Delinquency and Drift Revisited Volume 21
Book SynopsisFifty years ago, David Matza wrote Delinquency and Drift, challenging the ways people thought about the development of criminals. Today, Delinquency and Drift Revisited reminds criminologists that they ignore Matzaâs writings at their own intellectual peril. Matzaâs work shows his insights on a range of core criminological issues, such as: the complex nature of culture and its connection to criminality; the extent to which rule-breakers are truly different from the rest of us; the importance of focusing on human agency in understanding the subjective side of offending; the interaction of propensity and peer influences in criminal involvement; the role of the state in signifying individuals as deviant and entrapping them in criminal roles; and the processes that lead offenders to desist from crime. This volume was not written to pay homage to Matza, but to show how his ideas remain relevant to criminology today by continuing to question conventional wisdomTrade ReviewLittle did I expect in 1964 that Delinquency and Drift would remain an important work more than half a century later. It is heartening that the ideas expressed continue to have relevance for today's study of crime and delinquency. I enjoyed reading the volume, and I hope others will as well. —David Matza, Professor Emeritus, University of California, BerkeleyFor those unfamiliar with David Matza’s work, this thoughtful collection serves as an essential introduction. For those who know his work—or think they do—it serves as a reminder of how important Matza’s contribution has been. This is a timely and welcome exploration of the work of one of the most enduring criminologists of our time. —Elliot Currie, Professor, University of California, IrvineThe aptly titled volume Delinquency and Drift Revisited: The Criminology of David Matza and Beyond is a remarkable tribute to the importance of the work of David Matza to both the development and future of the conceptualization of deviance and crime. While many festschrifts glorify the past and emphasize the contributions of a scholar’s work to the present, the essays in this volume provide a framework for innovative future research in diverse areas based on Matza’s insights.—Marvin Krohn, Professor, University of Florida Table of ContentsContentsPrefacePart I. Origins1. David Matza—Criminologist: With New Reflections from David MatzaThomas G. Blomberg2. Delinquency and Drift: Challenging Criminology Then and NowTravis C. PrattPart II. Techniques of Neutralization3. Techniques of Neutralization [reprint]Gresham M. Sykes and David Matza4. The Current Status of Neutralization TheoryShadd Maruna and Heith CopesPart III. Subterranean Values5. Juvenile Delinquency and Subterranean Values [reprint]David Matza and Gresham M. Sykes6. Juvenile Delinquency and Subterranean Values RevisitedTimothy Brezina and Robert Agnew7. White-Collar Crime and Subterranean ValuesMichael L. Benson and Francis T. CullenPart IV. Delinquency and Drift8. Cognitions and Crime: Matza’s Ideas in Classic and Contemporary ContextPeggy C. Giordano and Jennifer Copp 9. Drifting Out of Crime: Criminal Careers, Maturational Reform, and DesistanceChristoffer Carlsson Part V. Becoming Deviant10. Revisiting Matza’s Concepts of Affinity and Affiliation: Lessons for the Study of Peer Influences in CriminologyJean Marie McGloin and Kyle J. Thomas11. Signification: The State as a Source of CrimeDaniel P. Mears and Cheryl Lero Jonson
£41.79
Taylor & Francis Ltd Youth Justice
Book SynopsisThis book provides a comprehensive, student-friendly and critical introduction to youth justice in England and Wales, offering a balanced evaluation of its development, rationale, nature and evidence base. It explores the evolution of definitions and explanations of youth offending and examines the responses to it that constitute youth justice.Bringing together theory, policy and practice, this book provides a balanced exposition of contemporary youth justice debates, including detailed discussions of governmental rationales, policy developments, practical issues and an extensive evaluation of critical academic positions. It includes a range of features designed to engage and inspire students: Stop and think': Activities challenging students to reflect on important issues. Conversations': Discussions of key themes and issues from the perspectives and experiences of relevant stakeholders, including policy makers and activists. Trade ReviewSteve Case’s "Youth Justice - A Critical Introduction" provides an essential introduction to youth justice in England and Wales, indeed I’d say is the essential introductory text, and as such fills a gap last occupied when Donald West first published his seminal ‘The Young Offender’ in 1967. Stimulating, balanced, but with a committed and challenging edge to it, no student, youth justice practitioner, or policy maker should allow themselves to be far away from a copy. Professor John Drew, Professor at University of Bedfordshire and Former Chief Executive of the Youth Justice Board for England and Wales (2009-2013). Table of ContentsIntroduction 1.Defining youth offending: The social construction of ‘youth offending’ 2.Explaining youth offending: Individual, socio-structural and systemic causes 3.Explaining youth offending: Risk factor theories 4.Responding to youth offending: The social construction of youth justice 5.Responding to youth offending: New Labour and the ‘new youth justice’ 6.Responding to youth offending: A newer ‘new youth justice’ Conclusion
£34.19
Taylor & Francis Ltd Shades of Deviance
Book SynopsisShades of Deviance is a turbo-driven guide to crime and deviance. It offers politically engaged, thought-provoking and accessibly written accounts of a wide range of socially and legally prohibited acts. This updated and revised edition is designed to be essential reading for general readers, undergraduate students in the fields of criminology and sociology, and those preparing to embark on degree courses in these fields. Written by field-leading experts from across the globe and designed for those who want a clear and exciting introduction to the complex areas of crime and deviance, this book provides short overviews of a wide range of social problems, harms and criminal acts, offering a series of cutting-edge and critical treatments of issues such as war and terrorism, incels and the alt-right, ecocide, trolling, hate crime and chemsex. A guide is also given to further readings and films to develop the reader's understanding of these issues. This new edition has beTrade ReviewAs with the first edition of this remarkable and indispensable book, this thoroughly revised second version pushes readers to broaden the way they think about deviance and social harm in modern societies—and to recognize the connections between the behaviors that often trouble us the most and the increasingly precarious and neglectful character of the contemporary global social order. Professor Elliott Currie, University of California, Irvine, USAA collection of fascinating insights into acts of deviance so wide and varied that conformity appears to an increasingly rare commodity. However, as the chapters in this volume attest, even as we become more diverse we are ever more policed. A book for our times.Professor Danny Dorling, University of Oxford Shades of Deviance is a thought-provoking collection bringing together short essays on a vast range of issues that are viewed in contemporary society as ‘deviant’, ‘harmful’, or ‘criminal’. Questioning the value of mainstream approaches which prioritise a focus on state defined problematic behaviours, this second edition collection includes 60 entries with new topics and authors covering low level issues such as yarnbombing to the more serious —such as terrorism and child soldiers. Written in a thoroughly engaging and accessible manner, this introductory text is a must read for all criminology students. Professor Christina Pantazis, University of BristolQuestions of deviance lie at the heart of criminological inquiry. The breadth and sociological curiosity that informs this book make it both a useful and highly enjoyable introduction to the topic. It will be a useful companion to students of criminology and several other social science disciplines. In fact, it creates a real danger that it will convert the latter into the former. Professor Katja Franko, University of OsloTable of ContentsPart I: Acts of transgression1 Crime Is Not Just for Criminologists Rowland Atkinson and Tammy Ayres 2 Begging Sabina Yasmin Rahman 3 Yarn Bombing Alyce McGovern 4 Spitting Ross Coomber 5 Street Racing and Joyriding Yunis Alam 6 Sex work Molly Dunn 7 Sadomasochism Thomas S. Weinberg 8 Public Sex Katharine Parker Part II: Subcultures and deviating social codes 9 Drugs, Substances and Intoxicants Tammy Ayres 10 Tattooing and Body Modification Kyla Bevin and James Treadwell 11 Incel Masculinity Sam Andrews and Anthony Ellis 12 Music and Subculture Víctor Ávila Torres 13 Chemsex Ford Hickson 14 Weapon Use Nicolas Florquin and Peter Squires 15 Graffiti Robert D. Weide 16 Parkour and Freerunning Thomas Raymen 17 Organised Fighting Sports Victoria E. Collins Part III: Changing technologies and harms 18 Online Fraud Kate Tudor 19 Hacking and Hacktivism Kevin F. Steinmetz 20 Lifestyle Medicines and Performance Enhancing Drugs Nick Gibbs 21 Robot Sex Corina Medley 22 Trolling and Online Abuse Emma A. Jane 23 Video Games Craig Kelly and Adam Lynes 24 Voyeurism and Trash Streaming Grace Gallacher Part IV: Social change and social problems 25 Domestic Violence and Abuse Jade Levell 26 Tourism Oliver Smith 27 Debt Mark Horsley 28 Sexual Deviance Katie McBride 29 Gambling Suzanne Baggs 30 Paedophilia Maggie Wykes 31 Pornography Samantha Keene 32 Stalking Laura Logan 33 Maritime Piracy Patricia Schneider 34 Drug Trafficking Zulia Orozco Reynoso Part V: Invisible and contested harms 35 Corporate Crime Mark Monaghan 36 Corruption Marina Zaloznaya 37 State Crime and Violence Diogo Azevedo Lyra, Carolina Christoph Grillo, Renato Coelho Dirk and Daniel Veloso Hirata 38 Tax Evasion Rowland Atkinson 39 Elder Abuse and Neglect Marie Beaulieu, Julien Cadieux Genesse and Kevin St-Martin 40 Fraud Jörg Wiegratz 41 Police Deviance Bill McClanahan 42 Consumption Rowland Atkinson Part VI: Hate, difference and culture 43 Gypsy Roma and Travellers Haley Read 44 Squatting Samuel Burgum 45 Hate Crime Tina G. Patel 46 Policing Politics and Protest Aidan O'Sullivan 47 Alt-Right Tanner Mirrlees Part VII: Questions of violence 48 Homicide Gabriel Feltran and Marcelli Cipriani 49 Terrorism Jacob Holzer 50 Animal Abuse Ruth McKie 51 School Violence Valéria Cristina de Oliveira 52 Child soldiers Tammy Ayres Part VIII: Harms in a global context 53 Ecocide Rob White 54 Environmental Activism Olivia Hasler 55 Gangs Dennis Rodgers 56 Human Trafficking and People Smuggling Daniel Briggs 57 Green Criminology Daan van Uhm 58 International Migration Mark Bushell 59 Slavery, Webcams and Human Trafficking Rosemary Broad 60 Urban Conflict Luana Motta 61 Waste Avi Brisman
£25.99
Taylor & Francis Ltd Critical and Intersectional Gang Studies
Book SynopsisThis book offers a critical and empirical examination of gang life, using an intersectional framework considering race, class, gender, and other characteristics. The book reexamines mainstream definitions of gangs, identifies myths and misconceptions, and presents the complex subcultural or countercultural realities of gang members and their associates. Special attention is given to the importance of structural violence experienced by gang members and their communities. This book also interrogates how mainstream gang research is complicit in the oppression of marginalized individuals who join gangs.Assembling contributions from leading experts involved in gang research and the investigation of street gang culture, this book provides a perspective often missing in the conversation around gangs. Direct input from current and former gang members provides a window into the lived experiences of gang lifea picture more accurate and useful than that afforded by the privileged lens oTable of ContentsChapter 1: Introduction Section 1: Gang DefinitionChapter 2: "Gang Ain’t In My Dictionary": Utilizing Insider Perspectives to Develop a Critical Gang DefinitionJennifer M. OrtizChapter 3: Demystifying Alt-Right Gangs: Are White Power Groups Cut from the Same Cloth as Conventional Gangs?Matthew Valasik & Shannon ReidChapter 4: [Folk]tales of different peoples¹: Transgressing gang definitions and historical ties Brian Cabral & Sarah BrunoSection 2: Critical Reflections on Gang StudiesChapter 5: Towards a Decolonial Imaginary to Reexamine and Redefine Mainstream Definitions of ‘Gangs’ and ‘Gang Members’ in America Amy Andrea MartinezChapter 6: MS-13, Gang Studies, and Crimes of the Powerful Kenneth Sebastian Leon & Maya Barack Chapter 7: Evolution of the Folk Devil: Deconstructing Claims about Hybrid Gangs Christian Bolden & Renee LamphereSection 3: Intersectional Gang StudiesChapter 8: Gang as a Proxy for Race: How the Criminal Justice System uses ‘gang’ to reinforce oppression in minority communitiesJennifer M. OrtizChapter 9: "I wanted to be the first Mexican Mafia female member:" An Intersectional Criminological Analysis of Chicana Gang Members in CaliforniaMarisa D. Salinas & Xuan SantosChapter 10: LGBTQ Gang Members’ Intersectional Identities and Experiences Vanessa Panfil
£34.19
Taylor & Francis Juvenile Justice
Book SynopsisJuvenile Justice: An Introduction, Tenth Edition, presents a comprehensive picture of juvenile offending, delinquency theories, and the ways juvenile justice actors and agencies react to delinquency. Whitehead and Lab offer evidence-based suggestions for successful interventions and treatment and examine the prospects for rebalancing the model of juvenile court. This new edition includes insightful analysis and the latest available statistics on juvenile crime and victimization, drug use, court processing, and corrections. Special attention is given to female involvement, disproportionate minority contact, and diversity issues. The text also includes extensive discussion of police shootings, the issue of race, probation reform, life sentences for juveniles, recent Supreme Court decisions, and reform suggestions from Currie and Feld. An essential text for undergraduate juvenile justice courses, this book offers rich pedagogicaTrade Review"Juvenile Justice: An Introduction gives a comprehensive review of the juvenile justice system, covering the extent of juvenile delinquency, the history of juvenile justice, theories explaining juvenile delinquent behaviors, topical issues such as juvenile gang involvement, juvenile drug use, and juveniles and the police. The juvenile justice process and the system’s response to juvenile delinquency are clearly outlined. I also appreciate how the authors interweave the juvenile justice landmark cases into the discussion. The book also discusses restorative justice as an alternative approach to dealing with juvenile delinquency.Another positive for me is the in-depth coverage of the theories explaining delinquency. While students in this course (usually sophomore or junior) would have already taken their theory course (Criminology) in their second semester, many do not recall even hearing about these theories. This gives me a chance to present this to them a second time."Sherill Morris-Francis, Ph.D., Associate Professor and Graduate Coordinator, Mississippi Valley State UniversityTable of Contents1. Introduction—The Definition and Extent of Delinquency 2. The History of Juvenile Justice 3. Explaining Delinquency—Biological and Psychological Approaches 4. Sociological Explanations of Delinquency 5. Gang Delinquency 6. Drugs and Delinquency 7. Policing and Juveniles 8. The Juvenile Court Process 9. Due Process and Juveniles 10. Institutional/Residential Interventions 11. Juvenile Probation and Community Corrections 12. Prevention in Juvenile Justice 13.The Victimization of Juveniles 14. Future Directions in Juvenile Justice
£80.74
Basic Books Rampage
Book Synopsis"In the last decade, school shootings have decimated communities and terrified parents, teachers, and children in even the most "family friendly" American towns and suburbs. These tragedies appear to b"Trade Review"School administrators, teachers, school boards, parents and others would be well advised to place Rampage high on their summer reading lists." Boston Globe"
£15.19
John Wiley & Sons Inc Clin Appr to Work with Young Offenders 10 Wiley
Book SynopsisExplores clinical approaches used by practitioners working with young offenders. It opens with coverage of theories of delinquency, types of delinquent activity and recent findings from criminological research on the developmental issues in delinquency.Table of ContentsPartial table of contents: THE RESEARCH BASE FOR WORKING WITH YOUNG OFFENDERS. Individual, Family and Peer Factors in the Development ofDelinquency (D. Farrington) SETTING FOR WORKING WITH YOUNGOFFENDERS. Working in Institutions (M. Milan) Diversion Programs (R. Leger, etal.). WORKING WITH OFFENDERS. Sociomoral Group Treatment for Young Offenders (J. Gibbs). Aggression Replacement Training: Methods and Outcomes (A. Goldstein& B. Glick). WORKING WITH OFFENCES. Adolescent Sex Offenders (J. Becker, et al.). Substance Use and Delinquency (M. McMurran). Indexes.
£151.16
University of California Press States of Delinquency
Book SynopsisExplores the experiences of young Mexican Americans, African Americans, and ethnic Euro-Americans in California correctional facilities including Whittier State School for Boys and the Preston School of Industry. This title shows how these boys and girls, and their families, resisted increasingly harsh treatment and various kinds of abuse.Trade Review"[States of Delinquency] is a tour de force of historical research... A valuable resource for the student and the citizen." Criminal Law & Crim Justice Bks / Criminal Justice Abstracts "Recommended." ChoiceTable of ContentsList of Illustrations Acknowledgments Introduction 1. Building Juvenile Justice Institutions in California 2. Fred C. Nelles: Innovative Reformer, Conservative Eugenicist 3. Mildred S. Covert: Eugenics Fieldworker, Racial Pathologist 4. Cristobal, Fred, Tony, and Albert M.: Specimens in Scientific Research and Race Betterment 5. Otto H. Close: Promising Leader, Complacent Bureaucrat 6. The Legacy of Benny Moreno and Edward Leiva: "Defective Delinquents" or Tragic Heroes? Epilogue: Recovering Youths' Voices Notes Bibliography Index
£21.25
University of California Press Millers Children Why Giving Teenage Killers a
Book SynopsisTrade Review"Miller’s Children reflects the depth of [Garbarino's] expertise and the hope he has come to have in the power of human transformation... [the book] offers readers a rich understanding of the psychology behind adolescent homicide, while also giving us reason to believe in the possibility of transformation and redemption for all youth." * Criminal Law and Criminal Justice Books *“Garbarino has written previously on adolescent violence, and in recent years he has served as a psychological expert witness in post-Miller resentencing hearings. Miller’s Children reflects the depth of his expertise and the hope he has come to have in the power of human transformation.” * Criminal Law and Criminal Justice Books *“A compelling and compassionate text that explores the impact of the 2012 US Supreme Court’s decision in Miller v. Alabama. . . . Weaving individual stories together with human development research, he builds a compelling argument that rehabilitation can give these youths a second chance in society. He emphasizes the role of education, reflection, mentoring, and spiritual development in rehabilitation. An eloquent reflection on the value of hope in the face of despair.” * CHOICE *“Miller’s Children sings of rehabilitation and the kind of mitigation we would want for our own children." * Times Literary Supplement *"The narratives and empirical perspectives woven throughout Miller’s Children allow Garbarino to push readers to consider that hope exists for juvenile killers and for the future of adolescent justice in the United States." * Adolescent Research Review *Table of ContentsAcknowledgments Preface 1 • Adolescence Squared: Why Are Kids Who Kill Different? 2 • Who Are They? 3 • The Moral Calculus: A Life for a Life? 4 • Running Away from the Monster 5 • Are There Exceptions? 6 • Translating Hope into Law and Practice References Index
£19.95
John Wiley & Sons Gangs and Girls Understanding Juvenile
Book SynopsisHelps readers understand and analyze the involvement of street gangs in female juvenile prostitution. This book discusses how young men are drawn to gang life, and how young girls become attracted and attached to the gang members who eventually sell them into prostitution.
£26.59
Rutgers University Press Trapped in a Vice The Consequences of
Book SynopsisTrapped in a Vice explores the lives of the young people in the criminal justice system, revealing the ways that they struggle to manage the expectations of that system; these stories from the ground level of the justice system demonstrate the complex exchange of policy and practice. Trade Review"Cox provides important and compelling insights about young people involved in the juvenile and criminal justice systems and about these systems themselves.Trapped in a Vice is a significant contribution to the field, filled with unique and comprehensive knowledge." -- Jamie Fader * author of Falling Back: Incarceration and Transitions to Adulthood among Urban Youth *"Trapped in a Vice is an excellent piece of scholarship from start to finish. Cox weaves together stories, policy data, and literature in a seamless fashion to expose the paradox of 'ungovernable' children. This brilliant, well written work is guaranteed to become a landmark piece in the field." -- Laura Abrams * author of Compassionate Confinement: A Year in the Life of Unit C *"Alexandra Cox's Trapped in a Vice will deepen the juvenile justice reform discussion. Fundamental to her work is an argument that is essential as it is true: reform must be broader than moving juveniles from adult prisons to juvenile prisons and rehabilitation efforts must have outcomes that extend beyond the walls of incarceration." -- Reginald Dwayne Betts * author of A Question of Freedom and Bastards of the Reagan Era *"Trapped in the juvenile justice system" spotlight * Gates Cambridge *Book Excerpt: Their Former Offense Keeps Blocking Them from Moving Ahead * JJIE.org *"The Past Repeats Itself in New York's Juvenile Justice System" interview with Alexandra Cox * NYN Media *Alexandra Cox's Trapped in a Vice on The Page 99 Test * The Page 99 Test *Pg. 99 Alexandra Cox's "Trapped in a Vice" * Campaign for the American Reader *"Youth incarceration comes to the North Country" by Alexandra Cox * Adirondack Daily Enterprise *"Alexandra Cox’s Trapped in a Vice: The Consequences of Confinement for Young People is a profound piece of scholarship with the potential to rattle the field of youth justice." * Critical Criminology *Community Calendar: April 6, 2018 Trapped in a Vice event listing * Press Republican *"Author opposes converting local prison to youth facility" by Glynis Hart * Adirondack Daily Enterprise *"New Books in Sociology" podcast interview with Alexandra Cox * New Books in Sociology Podcast *"Teens imprisoned: Vice as vise: Research book sparks discussion, questions effectiveness of juvenile incarceration" by Kim Dedam * Sun Community News *"ON THE SCENE: Challenges of incarcerating youth in New York," by Naj Wikoff * Lake Placid News *Black and Highly Dangerous Podcast with Alexandra Cox * Black and Highly Dangerous Podcasr *"An insightful, original examination, rich with details of the often confounding details of troubled young peoples’ lives, of the challenges and difficulties of constructively intervening in these lives." * Journal of Community Corrections *"Superpredator: The Criminalization of Youth," by Alex S. Vitale * Jacobin *"Sociologist Questions Justice of Juvenile Incarcerations," by The Elm staff * The Elm *"Building a “Kinder” Justice System: Youth Experiences with Incarceration" interview with Alexandra Cox * Abolition *"Written in an accessible, graceful style, and grounded in rich, hard-won data from the ground-level, Trapped in a Vice will be of great interest to a wide-range of punishment and society scholars, and it is required reading for juvenile justice researchers, policy makers, and advocates for reform." * Crime and Punishment *"An important book...Trapped in a Vice is a reminder that human existence is contingent, inherently contradictory, and fragile. This insight, while obvious, has been forgotten as the system tries to fit children into a simplistic mould of evidence-based interventions. More than anything, Trapped in a Vice is a cautionary tale for anyone who believes that solutions for inherently complex social problems are easy to come by." * The Howard Journal of Crime and Justice *"Trapped in a Vice: The Consequences of Confinement for Young People illustrates the problematic nature that is imprisoning youth and the issues with which the juvenile justice system currently operates. As such, it breaks new ground for researchers focusing on the development of offending and responses to offenders." * Journal of Youth and Adolescence *"This book is an extraordinary piece of social science research." * American Journal of Sociology *"[Cox] applies a strong sociological viewpoint, rooted in Foucault, to the story of juvenile justice-a view that is lacking in other texts. This theoretical strength comes through in how Cox relates her rich stories to larger discourses of neo-liberal control. Importantly, Cox addresses racial disparities head on as part of the larger picture of who is seen as 'worthy' and redeemable and who it not....[The book] is an important piece to read and ponder in the current wave of reform." * Social Forces *"A beautifully crafted book." * Social Justice *"Trapped in a Vice is likely to be of interest to a number of audiences. Students and scholars of juvenile justice, the sociology of punishment, youth, and inequality will appreciate the deeply human stories of the youth trapped in this system." * Theoretical Criminology *"The Critical Criminologist" interview with Alexandra Cox https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gqCg2UlDqmE * The Critical Criminologist *Table of ContentsIntroduction 1 1 Reproducing Reforms 13 2 Ungovernability and Worth 33 3 Racialized Repression: Barriers to the Emancipation of Young People at the Edges of the System 61 4 The Responsibility Trap 98 5 Change from the Inside 127 Conclusion 160 Methodological Appendix 167 Acknowledgments 179 Notes 183 Index 211
£27.90
Rutgers University Press Trapped in a Vice The Consequences of
Book SynopsisTrapped in a Vice explores the lives of the young people in the criminal justice system, revealing the ways that they struggle to manage the expectations of that system; these stories from the ground level of the justice system demonstrate the complex exchange of policy and practice. Trade Review"Cox provides important and compelling insights about young people involved in the juvenile and criminal justice systems and about these systems themselves.Trapped in a Vice is a significant contribution to the field, filled with unique and comprehensive knowledge." -- Jamie Fader * author of Falling Back: Incarceration and Transitions to Adulthood among Urban Youth *"Trapped in a Vice is an excellent piece of scholarship from start to finish. Cox weaves together stories, policy data, and literature in a seamless fashion to expose the paradox of 'ungovernable' children. This brilliant, well written work is guaranteed to become a landmark piece in the field." -- Laura Abrams * author of Compassionate Confinement: A Year in the Life of Unit C *"Alexandra Cox's Trapped in a Vice will deepen the juvenile justice reform discussion. Fundamental to her work is an argument that is essential as it is true: reform must be broader than moving juveniles from adult prisons to juvenile prisons and rehabilitation efforts must have outcomes that extend beyond the walls of incarceration." -- Reginald Dwayne Betts * author of A Question of Freedom and Bastards of the Reagan Era *"Trapped in the juvenile justice system" spotlight * Gates Cambridge *Book Excerpt: Their Former Offense Keeps Blocking Them from Moving Ahead * JJIE.org *"The Past Repeats Itself in New York's Juvenile Justice System" interview with Alexandra Cox * NYN Media *Alexandra Cox's Trapped in a Vice on The Page 99 Test * The Page 99 Test *Pg. 99 Alexandra Cox's "Trapped in a Vice" * Campaign for the American Reader *"Youth incarceration comes to the North Country" by Alexandra Cox * Adirondack Daily Enterprise *"Alexandra Cox’s Trapped in a Vice: The Consequences of Confinement for Young People is a profound piece of scholarship with the potential to rattle the field of youth justice." * Critical Criminology *Community Calendar: April 6, 2018 Trapped in a Vice event listing * Press Republican *"Author opposes converting local prison to youth facility" by Glynis Hart * Adirondack Daily Enterprise *"New Books in Sociology" podcast interview with Alexandra Cox * New Books in Sociology Podcast *"Teens imprisoned: Vice as vise: Research book sparks discussion, questions effectiveness of juvenile incarceration" by Kim Dedam * Sun Community News *"ON THE SCENE: Challenges of incarcerating youth in New York," by Naj Wikoff * Lake Placid News *Black and Highly Dangerous Podcast with Alexandra Cox * Black and Highly Dangerous Podcasr *"An insightful, original examination, rich with details of the often confounding details of troubled young peoples’ lives, of the challenges and difficulties of constructively intervening in these lives." * Journal of Community Corrections *"Superpredator: The Criminalization of Youth," by Alex S. Vitale * Jacobin *"Sociologist Questions Justice of Juvenile Incarcerations," by The Elm staff * The Elm *"Building a “Kinder” Justice System: Youth Experiences with Incarceration" interview with Alexandra Cox * Abolition *"Written in an accessible, graceful style, and grounded in rich, hard-won data from the ground-level, Trapped in a Vice will be of great interest to a wide-range of punishment and society scholars, and it is required reading for juvenile justice researchers, policy makers, and advocates for reform." * Crime and Punishment *"An important book...Trapped in a Vice is a reminder that human existence is contingent, inherently contradictory, and fragile. This insight, while obvious, has been forgotten as the system tries to fit children into a simplistic mould of evidence-based interventions. More than anything, Trapped in a Vice is a cautionary tale for anyone who believes that solutions for inherently complex social problems are easy to come by." * The Howard Journal of Crime and Justice *"Trapped in a Vice: The Consequences of Confinement for Young People illustrates the problematic nature that is imprisoning youth and the issues with which the juvenile justice system currently operates. As such, it breaks new ground for researchers focusing on the development of offending and responses to offenders." * Journal of Youth and Adolescence *"This book is an extraordinary piece of social science research." * American Journal of Sociology *"[Cox] applies a strong sociological viewpoint, rooted in Foucault, to the story of juvenile justice-a view that is lacking in other texts. This theoretical strength comes through in how Cox relates her rich stories to larger discourses of neo-liberal control. Importantly, Cox addresses racial disparities head on as part of the larger picture of who is seen as 'worthy' and redeemable and who it not....[The book] is an important piece to read and ponder in the current wave of reform." * Social Forces *"A beautifully crafted book." * Social Justice *"Trapped in a Vice is likely to be of interest to a number of audiences. Students and scholars of juvenile justice, the sociology of punishment, youth, and inequality will appreciate the deeply human stories of the youth trapped in this system." * Theoretical Criminology *"The Critical Criminologist" interview with Alexandra Cox https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gqCg2UlDqmE * The Critical Criminologist *Table of ContentsIntroduction 1 1 Reproducing Reforms 13 2 Ungovernability and Worth 33 3 Racialized Repression: Barriers to the Emancipation of Young People at the Edges of the System 61 4 The Responsibility Trap 98 5 Change from the Inside 127 Conclusion 160 Methodological Appendix 167 Acknowledgments 179 Notes 183 Index 211
£105.40
Taylor & Francis Ltd Working with Youth Violence
Book SynopsisRelevant for experienced and emerging social work and human service practitioners alike, this book explores the uniquely challenging, yet seemingly ubiquitous issue of youth violence. It provides an authentic and accessible discussion of the theories and evidence that inform practice with youth violence alongside the voices of practitioners and the young people they work with. These voices are drawn from work with the Name.Narrate.Navigate (NNN) program for youth violence. NNN provides a trauma-informed, culturally safe preventive-intervention for young people who use and experience violence, and specialist training for the workers who support them. The program embraces creative methods as a bridge between contemporary evidence on trauma and violence and Aboriginal healing practice. The dual focus of the program is informed and interconnected by action research involving Aboriginal Elders and community members, practitioners, and key service stakeholders, including young peopTable of Contents1.Youth violence, complexity, and context. 2.Justice responses to youth violence. 3.Practice responses to youth violence. 4.The Name.Narrate.Navigate (NNN) program. 5.Trauma, culture, and youth violence. 6.Emotional recognition, regulation, and relationality. 7.Invalidation, voice, and connection. 8.Empathy expressed and experienced. 9.Power, control, and agency. 10.Shame named, known and (re)negotiated. 11.Choice, change, and identity. 12.NNN, a (new) way of working.
£31.99
Taylor & Francis Ltd Redefining School Safety and Policing
Book SynopsisRedefining School Safety and Policing identifies and works to eliminate systemic issues in school policing that negatively impact students of color, LGBTQIA+ students, and other marginalized populations. Focusing on the fundamental goal of creating safe learning environments, Yarbrough lays out the unintended consequences of involving police in the administrative disciplinary process, as agents of school administrators and enforcers of zero-tolerance policies. Behavioral health support is important to students going through social, emotional, and mental health crises. True equity work brings everyone to a safe space in the middle, encouraging open discussion and courageous dialogue and aiming to create positive change. Yarbrough argues that behavioral health and racial equity are vital to transforming school policing and providing beneficial alternative solutions to school policing that do not lead students to the juvenile or criminal justice system. This bookTable of ContentsPreface1 Public Education and the Emergence of Modern Policing in the United States2 Intrinsic Issues in Policing3 Zero-tolerance Policies and the Culture-to-prison Pipeline4 Advent of School Policing5 The Art of School Policing6 Examination and Contributing Factors to School Violence7 Alternatives to School Policing8 Four Pillars of School Safety and Policing9 Safety and Security10 Threat Assessment11 Student Safety through an Equity Lens12 Behavioral Health13 Student Advocacy14 Mindset Shift for Full ImplementationResponse to Specific ExamplesIndex
£31.34
Taylor & Francis Subcultures
Book SynopsisSubcultures: The Basics is an accessible and engaging introduction to subcultures in a global context. This fully revised new edition adds new case studies and an additional chapter on the digital lives of subculturists as well as reflections on the relationships between subcultures and globalisation and the resurgence of the far-right. Blending theory and practice, this text examines a varied range of subcultures including hip hop, graffiti writing, heavy metal, punk, gamers, burlesque, parkour, riot grrrl, straight edge, roller derby, steampunk, b-boying/b-girling, body modification, and skateboarding. Subcultures: The Basics answers the key questions posed by those new to the subject, including: What is a subculture? What are the significant theories of subculture? How do subcultures emerge, who participates and why? How do subcultural identities interact with other aspects of self, such as social class, race, gender, and sexuTable of Contents1. What is a Subculture? 2. How do Subcultures Emerge and Why do People Participate? 3. How do Subcultures Resist ‘Mainstream’ Society … and are They Successful? 4. Who Participates in Subcultures and How do Subcultural Identities Interact with Other Aspects of Self? 5. Who are the ‘Authentic’ Subculturists and Who are the ‘Poseurs’? 6. How Does Society React to Subcultures? 7. Where do Subculturists Hang Out, From the Local to the Global? 8. How Have Digital Technologies Influenced Subcultures? 9. What Happens to Subculturists as They ‘Grow Up’?
£19.92
Taylor & Francis Deviant Behavior
Book SynopsisThe new 2022 edition of the most widely taught deviance text brings us into a changing political era. A new chapter on political deviance includes a section that defines political deviance, emphasizing a sociological and not an ideological definition. It also covers which sectors of the society define what constitutes political deviance; and political deviance and its relation to social change. In addition, the chapter on substance abuse provides more discussion of marijuana legalization and decriminalization. Although disease as potential deviance has been covered, the COVID-19 pandemic greatly expands discussions on this topic. Updated throughout, this new edition includes expanded coverage of Black Lives Matter, sexual harassment, the social construction of immigration, and other topics. A new section on logic, reasoning, and verification of facts is an important new feature for student critical thinking while it addresses the recent politics of truth and lying, including QAnon.<Table of Contents Introducing Deviance Explaining Deviant Behavior Constructing Deviance Poverty and the Hierarchy of Social Class Crime, Criminalization, and Criminal Behavior White Collar and Corporate Crime Political Deviance Substance Abuse Sexual Deviance Unconventional Beliefs Mental Disorder Undesirable Physical Characteristics Tribal Stigma
£68.39
Cambridge University Press Reformatory Schools
Book SynopsisThe penal reformer and educationist Mary Carpenter (180777) grew up in a family with a strong sense of obligation to those less fortunate. First published in 1851, this is an influential work on the education, care and support of young offenders, arguing for special institutions and a change in government policy.Table of ContentsPreface; Introductory chapter; 1. First principles; 2. Evening ragged schools; 3. Free day schools; 4. Industrial feeding schools; 5. The gaol; 6. Penal reformatory schools.
£32.99
Bloomsbury Publishing (UK) Understanding Street Culture Poverty Crime Youth and Cool
Book SynopsisJonathan Ilan is Lecturer in Criminology and Director of Studies for BA Criminology at the University of Kent, UK. He has researched youth cultures in Dublin and published numerous journal articles in the field of cultural criminology.Trade ReviewThe book is well written and a pleasure to read … Understanding Street Culture is an important text for academics, researchers, and criminal justice stakeholders interested in understanding how young peoples’ street cultural existences are regulated and thrust into contact with the law. It emphasizes the urgency of disrupting the perpetual criminalization of street culture and how, moving forward, this requires ‘more than the ‘business as usual’ of standard criminal justice practice’. * Angela Dwyer, Jeunesse, jeunessejournal.ca, Vol. 9 (1) *‘Understanding Street Culture’ by Jonathan Ilan is a book about the manifestations of street culture; what it is, how it came to be, the implications of it on mainstream society, and the effects mainstream society has on it … The book is a useful source for others to develop research on this important topic … Learning from Ilan’s book would offer a different way to consider how marginalization shapes adolescent development and outcomes. * Billie Endress, Journal of Youth and Adolescence, Vol. 45 *Table of Contents1. Introduction 2. Understanding Urban Poverty, Culture and Crime 3. Demography and Development: Class, Gender and Ethnicity 4. Space, Territory and Gangs 5. Street Life and Street Crime 6. From Street Expressivity to Commodifiable Cool 7. Street Flows in the Global Ghetto 8. Resistance, Ghetto Politics and the Social Control of the Slum 9. Conclusion.
£36.99
Taylor & Francis Ltd Reaffirming Juvenile Justice From Gault to
Book SynopsisThis book will expand students' knowledge and understanding of the evolution of juvenile justice in the last 50 years. Designed to coincide with the 50th anniversary of the landmark case In re Gault, which the U.S. Supreme Court decided in 1967, the authors provide a brief history of juvenile justice, then frame the developments and transformations that have occurred in the intervening years. Topics covered include an overview of the dramatic changes to the field following the spike in youth violence in the 1990s, the superpredator myth, zero-tolerance policies, and sanctions for juvenile offendersparticularly the 2005 abolition of the death penalty and subsequent decision on life without parole. The book also covers child and youth victimization and trauma, and recent prevention and treatment initiatives.Designed for upper-level undergraduates, this text reflects on the evolving U.S. juvenile justice system while anticipating future challenges andTrade ReviewAlida Merlo and Peter Benekos provide a compelling account of how science, ideology, and politics have shaped the evolution of juvenile justice policy. In a comprehensive and compassionate way, they illuminate the mistakes of the past as a way of showing progressive avenues for future reform. Scholarly but accessible, Reaffirming Juvenile Justice is both an essential reference book and ideal for courses focusing on wayward youths. --Francis T. Cullen, Distinguished Research Professor Emeritus, University of CincinnatiFifty years after the landmark Gault decision revolutionized juvenile justice, Merlo and Benekos undertake a sweeping and comprehensive review of that system. Reaffirming Juvenile Justice powerfully documents legal decisions and key policy debates in the decades that followed. A must-read for those concerned about how the United States treats its most vulnerable youth. --Meda Chesney-Lind, Professor of Women's Studies, University of Hawaii at ManoaMuch has happened since the Gault case was decided some fifty years ago—so much so that it can be hard to keep up with the relevant research and case law spanning multiple disciplines. Fortunately, Merlo and Benekos have done us a huge favor. This book situates the recent developments amidst a backdrop of juvenile justice issues, summarizing key developments, and anticipating the future. From scholars whose careers have been focused on key policy questions, I have no doubt you will learn as much as I have in reading this book. --Alex R. Piquero, Ashbel Smith Professor, The University of Texas at DallasReaffirming Juvenile Justice: From Gault to Montgomery is a well written and informative textbook. The authors provide an in-depth and comprehensive coverage of a range of issues including constitutionality, culpability, and system responses facing the juvenile justice system as well as challenges such as legal defense, disproportionate minority youth contact/involvement with the system, and conditions and the length of confinement. Couched within a historical context, the discussion of the role(s) that political ideology and the media play into the construction of the imagery of youth further sheds light on the complexities involved in the responses to and treatment of juvenile delinquents. A must read! --Michael Leiber, Professor in Criminology, University of South FloridaTable of ContentsPrefaceAcknowledgmentsChapter 1 Developing the Juvenile Justice SystemChapter 2 Demonization of Youth and Politicization of Juvenile JusticeChapter 3 Court Decisions: From In re Gault to Montgomery v. LouisianaChapter 4 From Superpredator to Traumatized Youth Chapter 5 Creating Sanctuary and Treating TraumaChapter 6 Challenges in Reaffirming Juvenile Justice Epilogue
£47.49
Taylor & Francis Ltd Social Development Models of Gang Involvement
Book SynopsisThis bookcontaining contributions from scholars who are well-known for their research on gangs, and selected as experts on the assigned topicsexamines youth gangs from a developmental/life-course perspective, exploring a myriad of issues related to gang membership, its causes, its consequences, and various intervention efforts to both prevent gang membership and reduce the problematic impact of gangs. Beginning with research exploring the intergenerational continuity in gang membership and examining the causal processes leading to gang membership, the structure of the book reflects the developmental sequence of gang membership. The consequences of gang membership for youth are examined, as are intervention strategies. The book also presents the first conceptual framework on female gang involvement, taking into account the differences in the paths and roles that women and girls may take into the gang. The book concludes by exploring how gang membership affects job possibilitieTable of ContentsIntroduction 1. Exploring intergenerational continuity in gang membership 2. Developmental pathways of youth gang membership: a structural test of the social development model 3. Differentiating between delinquent groups and gangs: moving beyond offending consequences 4. School transitions as a turning point for gang status 5. Leveraging the pushes and pulls of gang disengagement to improve gang intervention: findings from three multi-site studies and a review of relevant gang programs 6. Toward a multiracial feminist framework for understanding females’ gang involvement 7. The practical utility of a life-course gang theory for intervention 8. The labor market and gang membership in adulthood: is the availability, quality, and nature of legal work associated with adult gang involvement?
£128.25
Taylor & Francis Ltd The Moral Foundations of the Youth Justice System
Book SynopsisWhen is it fair to hold young people criminally responsible? If young people lack the capacity to make a meaningful choice and to control their impulses, should they be held criminally culpable for their behaviour? In what ways is the immaturity of young offenders relevant to their blameworthiness? Should youth offending behaviour be proscribed by criminal law? These are just some of the questions asked in this thoughtful and provocative book.In The Moral Foundations of the Youth Justice System, Raymond Arthur explores international and historical evidence on how societies regulate criminal behaviour by young people, and undertakes a careful examination of the developmental capacities and processes that are relevant to young people's criminal choices. He argues that the youth justice response needs to be reconceptualised in a context where one of the central objectives of institutions regulating children and young people's behaviour is to support the interests aTrade Review'This text makes a valuable contribution to contemporary youth justice with its thoroughgoing analysis of a much neglected issue. Arthur offers an informed, insightful and welcome exposition of the moral foundations of responses to youth offending; one that supplements and extrapolates the existing literature.'Stephen Case, Professor of Criminology in the Department of Social Sciences, Loughborough University, UKTable of Contents1. Introduction 2. The origins of childhood and the youth justice system2.1 Development of the concept of Childhood 2.2 Parens patriae 2.3 Statutory protection of childhood 2.4 Development of a separate youth criminal justice system 2.5 The decline of welfarism, re Gault and the rise of individual active citizens 2.6 Conclusions3. New Labour, new youth justice, new century 3.1 Age of criminal responsibility 3.2 Welfare of the child 3.3 Restorative justice 3.4 Punishing parents 3.5 Net widening 3.6 Custodial sanctions 3.7 Youth justice 2010-2015: coalition government and the Big Society 3.8 Conclusions 4. The impact of international law 4.1 Historical development of international law on children’s rights 4.2 United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child 4.3 Protect the best interests of the child 4.4 Support families and involve communities 4.5 Age-appropriate treatment 4.6 Diversion 4.7 Child’s voice must be heard 4.8 Conditions in custody 4.9 Application of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child 4.10 Conclusions 5. Young people who offend 5.1 Young offenders and their family life 5.2 Teenage Parents 5.3 Poverty 5.4 Experience of school 5.5 Mental Health 5.6 Addiction issues 5.7 Cognitive functioning and decision making 5.8 Children in care 5.9 Conclusions 6. Impact of criminalisation 6.1 Education and employment 6.2 Restorative justice 6.3 Custody 6.4 Conditions in custodial institutions 6.5 What works in preventing offenders re-offending 6.6 Public opinion 6.7 Conclusions 7. Young people, the youth court and the right to a fair trial7.1 Young people’s experiences 7.2 The European Convention on Human Rights 7.3 The Mental Health Act 1983 7.4 Stay of proceedings 7.5 Fitness to plead 7.6 Conclusions 8. The youth justice system and theories of punishment 8.1 Youth criminal law as retribution 8.2 Deterrence/Prevention 8.3 Public Censure/ Restorative justice 8.4 Conclusions9. Conclusions
£36.09
Taylor & Francis Ltd Juvenile Justice
Book SynopsisThis book provides a comprehensive and thought-provoking introduction to the juvenile justice system in the United States. It begins by tracing the historical origins of the legal concept of juvenile delinquency and the institutional responses that developed, and analyzes the problem of delinquency, including its patterns, correlates, and causes. With this essential foundation, the greater part of the book examines the full range of efforts to respond to delinquency through both informal and formal mechanisms of juvenile justice. Core coverage includes: The history and transformation of juvenile justice, The nature and causes of delinquency, Policing juveniles, Juvenile court processes, Juvenile probation and community-based corrections, Residential placement and aftercare programs, Delinquency prevention, Linking systems of care. Trade Review "This text offers a comprehensive and detailed overview of the juvenile justice system, incorporating the most relevant and current research. The information is presented in a format that is easily accessible to students. It is a must have for any juvenile justice course." - Riane Bolin, Assistant Professor of Criminal Justice, Radford University "Detailed, thorough, and current, Burfeind, Bartusch, and Hollist lead readers through the study of juvenile justice by offering an impressive array of up-to-date research, case studies, and evidenced based practices. Juvenile Justice: An Introduction to Process, Practice, and Research is comprehensive yet not overwhelming. The material is remarkably useful for anyone interested in learning about the system and/or working in the field of juvenile justice. The "how do we get students to read?" question is answered - use this book!" - Alison S. Burke, Associate Professor of Criminology and Criminal Justice, Southern Oregon University Table of ContentsSection I: Introduction to Juvenile Justice. 1. The Study of Juvenile Justice, 2. Origins and Transformation of Juvenile Justice, 3. Juvenile Justice Law, Structure, and Process, Section II: Understanding the Problem of Delinquency. 4. Data on Delinquency and Juvenile Justice, 5. The Nature of Delinquency, 6. Causes of Delinquency, Section III: Juvenile Justice Process. 7. Cops and Kids: Policing Juveniles, 8. Preliminary Procedures of Juvenile Courts: Detention, Transfer to Criminal Court, and Intake, 9. Formal Procedures of Juvenile Courts: Adjudication and Disposition, 10. Juvenile Probation, 11. Community-Based Corrections and Restorative Justice, 12. Residential Placement and Aftercare Programs, Section IV: Partnerships in Juvenile Justice. 13. Delinquency Prevention, 14. Linking Systems of Care
£82.64
Palgrave Macmillan Crime Prevention Security and Community Safety
Book SynopsisThe potential of crime prevention, security and community safety is constrained by implementation failure. This book presents a carefully-designed system of good practice, the 5Is, which handles the complexities of real world prevention, this aims to improve the performance of prevention, and advance process evaluation.Trade Review"Ekblom can be your guide." - Professional Security blog, Feb 2011 'The clarity of the style makes the book enjoyable and allows the author's reasoning to be easily followed...Ekblom identifies ground-level practitioners, delivery managers, and policy makers as his principal audience. Given the extensive use of examples from past crime-prevention projects, his book is actually a valid support for each of these three groups in their work. The book may also be attractive to researchers and students in applied criminology, as the 5Is framework is not only a practical, but also a research, tool.' - European Journal on Criminal Policy and ResearchTable of ContentsSeries Editor's Preface Acknowledgements Introduction Implementation Failure: The Dismal Story Implicated Ignorance and Culpable Confusion: The Contribution to Implementation Failure of Deficient Knowledge and Articulacy The Gift to be Simple? How Avoiding the Issue of Complexity Contributes to Implementation Failure Appropriate Complexity Specification for a Knowledge Framework Introducing the 5Is Framework Conceptual Companions to 5Is: Defining Crime Prevention Activities, Institutional Contexts and Values A Companion Framework for Causes of Crime and Preventive Interventions: The Conjunction of Criminal Opportunity Presenting the Is in Detail Intelligence Intervention Implementation Involvement Impact – and Process Evaluation Conclusion End notes References Index
£85.49
Palgrave Macmillan Male Rape
Book SynopsisFocusing on male-on-male rape, this book looks at the common myths surrounding this taboo issue, including the idea that ''men who rape other men must be homosexual'' and that ''real men can''t be raped''. It also reveals that men are not only raped in prison, as is commonly believed, and that they suffer similar trauma to female survivors of rape.Trade Review'Although the topic of male rape is receiving increasing research interest in the forensic, clinical and social psychological literature, there are currently very few academic texts relating to this issue. I applaud Dr. Abdullah-Kahn for under-taking this timely and potentially very useful book.' Dr. Michelle Davies, Senior Lecturer of Psychology, University of Central Lancashire, UK.Table of ContentsIntroduction Taking Victims into Account and Considering the Impact of Victim blame. Contextualising the Issue of Male Rape Theoretical Explanations for the Occurrence of Male Researching Male on Male Rape Challenging Myths? Male Rape in the News The Metropolitan Police Service The Nature and Impact of Male Rape: Empirical Findings from Survivors of Male Rape Policy Directions for Male Rape and Conclusions.
£40.49
Palgrave MacMillan UK Children Young People and the Press in a Transitioning Society Representations Reactions and Criminalisation Palgrave SocioLegal Studies
Trade Review“This is a remarkable and unusual book, in drawing directly on the voices of children and young people from a group subject to particular attention in the news media, as well as the views of representatives of the media and of relevant children’s organizations. … This book is highly recommended as a contribution to studies in youth criminology and transitional justice, and is also of interest more widely in respect of children’s rights and the role of the media.” (Julie Doughty, Journal of Law and Society, Vol. 46 (1), March, 2019)“The book has a coherent structure, mixes objectivity with obvious (and appropriate) passion and combines detail with readability. It is both a valuable addition to the literature on youth crime and justice and contributes more broadly to a critical understanding of the place of children and young people in contemporary society. It deserves a wide readership.” (Tim Bateman, Children & Society, Vol. 32, 2018)Table of ContentsPART I: THE THEORETICAL CONTEXT.- Chapter 1. Researching the Media Representations of Children and Young People in Northern Ireland.- Chapter 2. The Significance and Impact of the Media in Contemporary Society.- Chapter 3. The Impact of Social Reaction on Contemporary Policy Responses to Children and Young People.- PART II: MEDIA REPRESENTATIONS, SOCIAL REACTION AND THE IMPACT.- Chapter 4. Print Media Content Analysis.- Chapter 5. Reading the ‘Riots’.- Chapter 6. ‘It’s the Nature of the Beast’.- Chapter 7. ‘The Hidden Voices’ in the Media.- PART III: CHALLENGES AND FUTURE POLICY RESPONSES.- Chapter 8. Reading Between the Headlines
£67.49
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Teen Legal Rights
Book SynopsisTeen legal rights are perpetually changing in American society, whether in the classroom, at work, or within family and community settings. Fully revised and updated to reflect important changes in the legal status and rights of young people from all walks of life, the fourth edition of Teen Legal Rights is an accessible and indispensable resource to help teenagers navigate and understand the extent and limitations of their rights and liberties.Employing a simple FAQ format organized into nearly two dozen topical chapters (including new chapters devoted to such subjects as immigration and trans youth), First Amendment scholar David L. Hudson Jr. provides an authoritative analysis of the judicial system as it pertains to teens and their interests, explaining important court decisions, legal arguments, and legislative changes to help teens better understand how their rights are evolving as they move deeper into the 2020s.
£71.25
Bristol University Press Foundations for Youth Justice
Book SynopsisThis exciting new book outlines the state of practice now in flux within structures created by New Labour but moving in a different direction under the Coalition Government. It explores opportunities for a fresh orientation that places young people at the centre and works collaboratively to nurture strengths, competences and capital.Trade Review"This is a very welcome book...there are useful `implications for practice’ sections at the end of each chapter as well as recommendations for further reading...A book that should certainly appeal to both students and practitioners of youth justice." Professional Social Work“As the New Labour youth justice orthodoxy begins to unravel, Robinson delivers precisely what is required. She offers a radical but realistic prescription for youth justice practice based on an understanding of young people as active protagonists in determining their own future, albeit in adverse circumstances. The book deserves a wide audience. “ Dr Tim Bateman, Reader in youth justice, University of Bedfordshire"This is a landmark book. Robinson's scholarly and measured voice draws out 'state of the art' theory and empirical research at the same time as drawing in practitioners and providing them with the tools to think reflexively about their practice and the policy field they work within. Should be necessary reading for everyone currently working in youth justice!" Professor Jo Phoenix, University of LeicesterTable of ContentsSection 1: Theories and concepts of youth and justice; Growing up in the modern world; Young people at the margins; Youth justice histories; Youth justice - present and future; Section 2: Issues for young people; The transition from school to work; Sex and relationships; Mental health and well-being; Growing up in public care; Telling tales of alcohol and drugs; The anti-social behaviour agenda; Section 3: Issues for youth justice practice; Aspects of risk; Safeguarding young people; Collaborative and multi-agency working; Prevention and pre-court intervention; Challenging practice in the courts; Restorative justice and the referral order initiative; Working with young people on community orders; Imprisoning young people.
£24.29
Bristol University Press Foundations for Youth Justice
Book SynopsisThis exciting new book outlines the state of practice now in flux within structures created by New Labour but moving in a different direction under the Coalition Government. It explores opportunities for a fresh orientation that places young people at the centre and works collaboratively to nurture strengths, competences and capital.Trade Review"This is a very welcome book...there are useful `implications for practice’ sections at the end of each chapter as well as recommendations for further reading...A book that should certainly appeal to both students and practitioners of youth justice." Professional Social Work“As the New Labour youth justice orthodoxy begins to unravel, Robinson delivers precisely what is required. She offers a radical but realistic prescription for youth justice practice based on an understanding of young people as active protagonists in determining their own future, albeit in adverse circumstances. The book deserves a wide audience. “ Dr Tim Bateman, Reader in youth justice, University of Bedfordshire"This is a landmark book. Robinson's scholarly and measured voice draws out 'state of the art' theory and empirical research at the same time as drawing in practitioners and providing them with the tools to think reflexively about their practice and the policy field they work within. Should be necessary reading for everyone currently working in youth justice!" Professor Jo Phoenix, University of LeicesterTable of ContentsSection 1: Theories and concepts of youth and justice; Growing up in the modern world; Young people at the margins; Youth justice histories; Youth justice - present and future; Section 2: Issues for young people; The transition from school to work; Sex and relationships; Mental health and well-being; Growing up in public care; Telling tales of alcohol and drugs; The anti-social behaviour agenda; Section 3: Issues for youth justice practice; Aspects of risk; Safeguarding young people; Collaborative and multi-agency working; Prevention and pre-court intervention; Challenging practice in the courts; Restorative justice and the referral order initiative; Working with young people on community orders; Imprisoning young people.
£71.99
Bristol University Press Children Behind Bars
Book SynopsisThis engaging book presents the shocking truth about the lives and deaths of children in custody. Drawing on human rights legislation, it outlines the harsh realities of penal child custody. The issues are explored through the lens of protection, not punishment, and the author finds there can be only one conclusion: child prisons must close.Trade Review“Carolyne Willow exposes cruel, inhuman and degrading realities facing children exiled to prison. This book is recommended to everyone who cares about child protection and human rights.” Thomas Hammarberg, adviser on human rights to the United Nations and European Union"Carolyne Willow's evocative and troubling book on the imprisonment of children is a damning indictment of the ways in which vulnerable individuals are treated by the criminal justice system." British Journal of Criminology"Robust and shocking, this book is very moving and must provide the platform for reform to better protect the young people who we lock up and keep out of sight.” Peter Wanless, chief executive, National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children“Carolyne Willow’s book is timely evidence that the justice secretary’s proposal to imprison 320 children, in what he euphemistically calls a secure college, compounds present abuse.” Lord Ramsbotham, former chief inspector of prisons for England and Wales"Child imprisonment is always abusive. No child should sleep in a cell nor call prison 'home'. 'Children behind bars' will inform you, sear your heart and stir your conscience to action." Yvonne Bailey, mother of Joseph Scholes“Carolyne Willow’s carefully researched analysis of child abuse in prison, illustrated by haunting case studies, shames our society. Prisons are not safe places, and children should not be sent there.” Sir William Utting, former chief inspector of social services for England"This book represents a work of great empathy...should strongly influence policymakers, politicians and those involved in youth justice to rethink and change the practice of sending children to prison." Child Abuse Review"This is the book we've all been waiting for, assembled by an author who has passion, knowledge and wisdom." Camila Batmanghelidjh, founder and director of Kids Company"This book highlights the need for reform of juvenile offenders in Britain, but can appeal to an international audience as child imprisonment is not only a British fallacy." Child Adolescent Social Work Journal"All of the evidence points to the corrosive, ineffective and damaging effects of child imprisonment. Willow’s book further strengthens the compelling case for abolition." Professor Barry Goldson, The University of Liverpool“The British obsession with prison has cost the lives of too many children. Carolyne Willow’s book exposes the raw and terrible truth about state-sanctioned abuse of children in custody. Read her book and then take action to end to the use of prison for our children.” Frances Crook, chief executive, Howard League for Penal ReformTable of ContentsIntroduction; Things were not right at home; They just don't listen; I think it’s quite like rape; I can't breathe; What gives them the right to hit a child in the nose; We should be able to hug our families; Every night I'm starving; Children were given bags to urinate in; The violence is unbelievable; Listen to the kids; They shouldn't be there.
£14.24
Bristol University Press Positive Youth Justice
Book SynopsisThis topical book outlines a model of positive youth justice: Children First, Offenders Second (CFOS), which promotes child-friendly, diversionary, inclusionary, engaging, promotional practice and legitimate partnership between children and adults to serve as a blueprint for other local authorities and countries.Trade Review"This book is comprehensive, accessible and up-to-date covering all aspects of youth justice. It is a ‘must buy’ and required reading for established academics, students and youth justice professionals" Sean Creaney, Trustee of the National Association for Youth Justice"By building on and extending their long-term local research project in Swansea, Haines and Case make a welcome contribution to rethinking youth justice law, policy and practice." Professor Barry Goldson, The University of Liverpool?"This thought-provoking and timely book will speak to the interests of many ... a welcome addition to the youth justice literature." Dr Laura Kelly, Liverpool John Moores UniversityTable of ContentsIntroduction: A Children First, Offenders Second philosophy of positive youth justice ; Positive Youth Justice – Introducing Children First, Offenders Second; What is Children First, Offenders Second?; The context of Children First, Offenders Second positive youth justice: evolution through devolution; Putting children first in the youth justice system; Progressive diversion; Progressive prevention-promotion; Conclusion.
£21.59
Policy Press Responding to Youth Violence through Youth Work
Book SynopsisDrawing on the findings of a two-year European research project, this book presents a new model for responding meaningfully and effectively the 'problem' of how to respond to violence involving young people that continues to challenge youth workers and policy makers.Trade Review"Impressively steps outside of the norms associated with existing youth work scholarship making an important, wide-ranging contribution to our knowledge of youth work’s role in responding to youth violence.” Ross Deuchar, University of the West of ScotlandTable of ContentsPreface ~ John Pitts; Part 1: Literature review, theoretical frame and researching youth violence; Youth work and youth violence in a European context; Our theoretical frame; Using participatory research methods to study youth violence; Part 2: Responding meaningfully to youth violence; Working at the personal (P) level; Working at the community(C) level; Working at the structural (S) level; Working at the existential (E) level; Part 3: Rethinking youth work practice and policy; Rethinking some youth worker tales; Working with intersectional identities; Creating policy for good practice; Part 4: Youth work responses in action - case studies of praxis; Responding to structural and symbolic violence: A comparative case study; A sports based response to youth violence; Exploring “Confrontational Pedagogy”; Embedding Community Work; Ethnopraxis in action; Imagining realistic alternatives.
£71.99
Bristol University Press Responding to Youth Violence through Youth Work
Book SynopsisDrawing on the findings of a two-year European research project, this book presents a new model for responding meaningfully and effectively the 'problem' of how to respond to violence involving young people that continues to challenge youth workers and policy makers.Trade Review"Impressively steps outside of the norms associated with existing youth work scholarship making an important, wide-ranging contribution to our knowledge of youth work’s role in responding to youth violence.” Ross Deuchar, University of the West of ScotlandTable of ContentsPreface ~ John Pitts; Part 1: Literature review, theoretical frame and researching youth violence; Youth work and youth violence in a European context; Our theoretical frame; Using participatory research methods to study youth violence; Part 2: Responding meaningfully to youth violence; Working at the personal (P) level; Working at the community(C) level; Working at the structural (S) level; Working at the existential (E) level; Part 3: Rethinking youth work practice and policy; Rethinking some youth worker tales; Working with intersectional identities; Creating policy for good practice; Part 4: Youth work responses in action - case studies of praxis; Responding to structural and symbolic violence: A comparative case study; A sports based response to youth violence; Exploring “Confrontational Pedagogy”; Embedding Community Work; Ethnopraxis in action; Imagining realistic alternatives.
£25.19
Little, Brown & Company All Day
Book SynopsisEighteen years ago, performance artist Liza Jessie Peterson never thought that her day of substitute teaching at Rikers Island C-74 would change the course of her life, but it did. It ignited a lifelong passion--which continues in her work with incarcerated kids today--to make a difference in the lives of youth in trouble. Her powerful narrative captures the essence, humor, intellect, creativity and psychology of children in the penal system. She intimately introduces readers to her students. We see them, smell their musk, feel their attitudes, hear their voices and learn how they came to be jailed--residents of the island. Everyone in the classroom grows-including the teacher-in this must-read memoir for anyone who cares about children and education. Peterson''s perspective and insights will make any teacher a better teacher. This book will encourage and empower anyone committed to social justice.
£18.89
Edinburgh University Press Juvenile Justice in Victorian Scotland
Book SynopsisWith case studies ranging from police courts to the High Court of Justiciary, the book offers a lively account of the way children experienced Scotland's early juvenile justice system.
£81.00