Young People in Care and Criminal Behaviour

Front Cover
Jessica Kingsley Publishers, Oct 15, 2005 - Social Science - 208 pages

Society holds a popular perception that links children in public care with criminal activity, but this connection is largely assumed. This book addresses the lack of evidence supporting this potentially damaging assumption.

It begins by analysing past research, critically examining current policy and combining theoretical insights from the disciplines of childcare and criminology in order to form a theoretical framework for research. The empirical evidence of thirty-nine interviews with young people who have been through the care system is then drawn upon to highlight key findings and conclusions about the relationship between care and crime, and the implications towards current policy. Addressing issues such as:

the residential care experience

developing secure attachments in the context of care

experiences of education

life after care,

these powerful examples show the flaws, failures and successes of the various childcare services by offering insight into the reality of young peoples experiences.

This book is highly relevant to new legislation and the current political agenda, and will prove an eye-opening read for policymakers and practitioners in the fields of child care and criminology, social workers, and students of social work, social policy and criminology.

From inside the book

Contents

Part II Young Peoples Experiences
77
Part III Conclusion
171
References
189
Subject index
199
Author index
205
Copyright

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Page 42 - The best interests of the child must be a primary consideration...
Page 57 - I advocate sees in the delinquent a person relatively free of the intimate attachments, the aspirations, and the moral beliefs that bind most people to a life within the law.
Page 75 - The extent to which generalizations may be made from case studies depends upon the adequacy of the underlying theory and the whole corpus of related knowledge of which the case is analysed rather than on the particular instance itself.
Page 189 - Borland, M., Pearson, C, Hill, M., Tisdall, K. and Bloomfield, I. (1998) Education and Care away from Home. Edinburgh: Scottish Council for Research in Education.
Page 62 - The best place to see reintegrative shaming at work is in loving families.
Page 58 - delinquents concur in the conventional assessment of delinquency."22 We assume, in contrast, that there is variation in the extent to which people believe they should obey the rules of society, and, furthermore, that the less a person believes he should obey the rules, the more likely he is to violate...
Page 101 - To ensure that children are securely attached to carers capable of providing safe and effective care for the duration of childhood.
Page 194 - Minty, B. (1999) Annotation: outcomes in long-term foster family care. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 40, 991-999.
Page 58 - If a person does not care about the wishes and expectations of other people — that is, if he is insensitive to the opinion of others — then he is to that extent not bound by the norms. He is free to deviate.
Page 21 - ... there is still a great deal that we do not know about how scientists arrive at their problems, do the really crucial work on them, and draw their basic insights.

About the author (2005)

Claire Taylor is currently working in the area of crime reduction. She has previously worked at the universities of Nottingham and Lancaster. This book is based upon her doctoral research undertaken at Lancaster University.

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