Understanding youth crime : an Australian study
著者
書誌事項
Understanding youth crime : an Australian study
Ashgate, c2003
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注記
Includes bibliographical references (p. [195]-209) and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Adolescence is popularly understood as a transitional phase of turbulence and extremes. It is also often associated with "trouble". Criminal justice statistics, however, reveal that youth criminality remains a relatively rare phenomenon, less than one per cent of the total adolescent population in any given year. This book is based upon a major Australian research programme to consider the key social factors impacting upon the lives of young people. A sample of 1300 young people was divided into three major subgroups: a "control" group, drawn from state secondary schools and closely approximating the general population; a chronically marginalized cohort representing a "vulnerable group", and a group of offenders, most of whom were incarcerated at the time of the research.
目次
- The sibling study: theory, research and guiding principles, Mark Lynch, Stephanie McGrane, Emma Ogilvie and John S. Western
- offending behaviours - situated choices and consequences, John S. Western, Mark Lynch, Emma Ogilvie and Abigail A. Fagan
- age and offending - characteristics and criminological factors, Mark Lynch, Emma Ogilvie and Wing Hong Chui
- gender and offending behaviours - opportunity, motivations and manifestations, Emma Ogilvie and John S. Western
- gender and offending attitudes: criminality, compliance and complexity, Emma Ogilvie
- social inequality, alienation and socio-economic position, John S. Western
- family influences and delinquency, Lisa Kennedy, Ian O'Connor and John S. Western
- the influence of siblings on substance use and delinquency, Denise A. Durrington, Abigail A. Fagan and David Chant
- urban indigenous young people - criminality, accommodation or resistance, Mark Lynch, Abigail A. Fagan, Emma Ogilvie and Robyn Lincoln
- adolescent victimization and involvement in crime, Abigail A. Fagan, Ross Homel, Ian O'Connor and Rosie Teague
- criminality and conformity - implications for the future, Mark Lynch, Emma Ogilvie and John S. Western.
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