Because childhood and adolescence are crucial phases in psycho-social development and the formation of responsible citizens, an unusual degree of attention and supervision is directed at the young (Bittner, 1976; Rose, 1989). Such is the moral frailty of youth that mere presence or 11 doing nothing" (Corrigan, 1979) can, under certain circumstances, excite adult anxieties as a harbinger of immediate or later danger. Delinquency and adolescent antisocial behaviour are not, therefore, a matter of objective, positivistic measurement and control, but are bound up with larger patterns of intergenerational relationships. These relationships are also conditioned by social and spatial environments
Guided by Situational Action Theory the aim was to explore the role of the social environment and it...
Session 2: Youth. Presenter: Michael P. Vimont, Ph.D., Case Western Reserve University (2011)- "Expl...
Within rural communities, young people are highly visible and therefore more readily stigmatized and...
Because childhood and adolescence are crucial phases in psycho-social development and the formation ...
This article compares Dutch rural and non-rural adolescents’ delinquent behavior and examines two so...
Purpose: Because many studies on witnessing violence focus on urban youth, little is yet known about...
Australian young people from rural areas, particularly Aboriginal young people, are overrepresented ...
Generally, people suspect most crime to be a characteristic of large, older central cities. In fact,...
Young people are vital for any type of society – but certainly more important forrural communities a...
Once believed to be a poor inner city neighborhood characteristic, youth violence and crime are now ...
Crime is often perceived as an urban issue rather than a problem that occurs in rural areas, but how...
The patterns of offending behaviour in young people (adolescents and young adults) in Australia are ...
The news of teenagers and even younger children committing ever more serious and violent crimes cont...
This study examined an ecological perspective on the development of antisocial behavior during adole...
Rural crime has largely been understood through social disorganization theory. The dominance of this...
Guided by Situational Action Theory the aim was to explore the role of the social environment and it...
Session 2: Youth. Presenter: Michael P. Vimont, Ph.D., Case Western Reserve University (2011)- "Expl...
Within rural communities, young people are highly visible and therefore more readily stigmatized and...
Because childhood and adolescence are crucial phases in psycho-social development and the formation ...
This article compares Dutch rural and non-rural adolescents’ delinquent behavior and examines two so...
Purpose: Because many studies on witnessing violence focus on urban youth, little is yet known about...
Australian young people from rural areas, particularly Aboriginal young people, are overrepresented ...
Generally, people suspect most crime to be a characteristic of large, older central cities. In fact,...
Young people are vital for any type of society – but certainly more important forrural communities a...
Once believed to be a poor inner city neighborhood characteristic, youth violence and crime are now ...
Crime is often perceived as an urban issue rather than a problem that occurs in rural areas, but how...
The patterns of offending behaviour in young people (adolescents and young adults) in Australia are ...
The news of teenagers and even younger children committing ever more serious and violent crimes cont...
This study examined an ecological perspective on the development of antisocial behavior during adole...
Rural crime has largely been understood through social disorganization theory. The dominance of this...
Guided by Situational Action Theory the aim was to explore the role of the social environment and it...
Session 2: Youth. Presenter: Michael P. Vimont, Ph.D., Case Western Reserve University (2011)- "Expl...
Within rural communities, young people are highly visible and therefore more readily stigmatized and...