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dc.contributor.authorBateman, Timen
dc.date.accessioned2019-09-23T09:26:44Z
dc.date.available2019-09-23T09:26:44Z
dc.date.issued2019-09-17
dc.identifier.citationBateman T (2019) 'Responding to youth offending: historical and current developments in practice', in Ugwudike P, Graham H, McNeil F, Raynor P, Taxman FS, Trotter C (ed(s).). The Routledge Companion to rehabilitative work in criminal justice, edn, London: Routledge pp.718-728.en
dc.identifier.isbn9781138103320
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10547/623496
dc.description.abstractThis chapter proceeds from an understanding that youth justice stands at the intersection of two social constructions: crime on the one hand and childhood on the other. As a consequence, the meaning of youth justice is fluid and interpretations of what constitutes an appropriate response to youth offending vary over time and place. Focusing on England and Wales, responses to youth crime since the Second World War are explored over four distinct chronological periods. The analysis demonstrates that policy and practice are subject to periodic sharp reversals that both reflect, and give rise to, changing constructions of youthful lawbreaking. Such shifts, moreover, frequently betray a pragmatic reaction to political imperatives rather than any engagement with evidence, confirming that responding to youth offending is not, and has not been, a neutral endeavour.
dc.language.isoenen
dc.publisherRoutledgeen
dc.relation.urlhttps://www.routledge.com/The-Routledge-Companion-to-Rehabilitative-Work-in-Criminal-Justice/Ugwudike-Graham-McNeill-Raynor-Taxman-Trotter/p/book/9781138103320en
dc.subjectyouth justiceen
dc.subjectyouth crimeen
dc.subjectwelfare and justiceen
dc.subjectrehabilitationen
dc.titleResponding to youth offending: historical and current developments in practiceen
dc.title.alternativeThe Routledge Companion to rehabilitative work in criminal justiceen
dc.typeBook chapteren
dc.date.updated2019-09-23T09:14:37Z
html.description.abstractThis chapter proceeds from an understanding that youth justice stands at the intersection of two social constructions: crime on the one hand and childhood on the other. As a consequence, the meaning of youth justice is fluid and interpretations of what constitutes an appropriate response to youth offending vary over time and place. Focusing on England and Wales, responses to youth crime since the Second World War are explored over four distinct chronological periods. The analysis demonstrates that policy and practice are subject to periodic sharp reversals that both reflect, and give rise to, changing constructions of youthful lawbreaking. Such shifts, moreover, frequently betray a pragmatic reaction to political imperatives rather than any engagement with evidence, confirming that responding to youth offending is not, and has not been, a neutral endeavour.


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