This paper examines how young people living in a London neighbourhood with high levels of crime, negotiate risk with their parents. Parenting strategies for protecting children from risk have been criticised as authoritarian and over-protective, or as neglectful and chaotic. As they discussed how their own families grappled with anxieties about crime, violence and sexual activity, the young people in this study described complex relationships characterised by sensitive negotiation, bounded trust, and support to manage life in a tough neighbourhood. While many families seemed able to maintain a balance between control and autonomy, and to smooth over discord, for others relationships were fractured, further increasing risks to their safety i...
The role of the family as a key factor in encouraging gang membership and criminality is hotly debat...
In the UK, the issue of parent abuse remains an unacknowledged and under-researched form of family v...
Children are nested in families, and families are nested within communities (e.g. neighbourhoods). T...
International research has shown that young people in residential care experience challenges and are...
International research has shown that young people in residential care experience challenges and are...
The paper sets out to describe how children from disadvantaged areas perceive their communities and ...
This article traces links between subjectivity, peer relations and neighbourhood risk for a group of...
Parental monitoring of settings is not always relevant for the prevention of adolescent crime becaus...
Parental responsibility for young offenders is a social construct which is ambiguous and taken for g...
Several studies show that parents can play an important role in buffering the effects of neighbourho...
There has been growing interest in child criminal exploitation in the UK due to changes in the drug ...
Developing Kelly's perspicacious deliberations on mistrust, surveillance and regulation in this jour...
Recently, socially decontextualised understandings of youth crime as triggered by individual and fam...
The purpose of this study was to examine the link between neighborhood risk and adolescent antisocia...
Adolescent-to-parent violence (APV) has received little attention in the social work literature, alt...
The role of the family as a key factor in encouraging gang membership and criminality is hotly debat...
In the UK, the issue of parent abuse remains an unacknowledged and under-researched form of family v...
Children are nested in families, and families are nested within communities (e.g. neighbourhoods). T...
International research has shown that young people in residential care experience challenges and are...
International research has shown that young people in residential care experience challenges and are...
The paper sets out to describe how children from disadvantaged areas perceive their communities and ...
This article traces links between subjectivity, peer relations and neighbourhood risk for a group of...
Parental monitoring of settings is not always relevant for the prevention of adolescent crime becaus...
Parental responsibility for young offenders is a social construct which is ambiguous and taken for g...
Several studies show that parents can play an important role in buffering the effects of neighbourho...
There has been growing interest in child criminal exploitation in the UK due to changes in the drug ...
Developing Kelly's perspicacious deliberations on mistrust, surveillance and regulation in this jour...
Recently, socially decontextualised understandings of youth crime as triggered by individual and fam...
The purpose of this study was to examine the link between neighborhood risk and adolescent antisocia...
Adolescent-to-parent violence (APV) has received little attention in the social work literature, alt...
The role of the family as a key factor in encouraging gang membership and criminality is hotly debat...
In the UK, the issue of parent abuse remains an unacknowledged and under-researched form of family v...
Children are nested in families, and families are nested within communities (e.g. neighbourhoods). T...