da Gillian Dickinson mancano 5 anni
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The map relates to Section B, Question 1 of the YODD Exam:
Explaining Youth Crime- Individual, Socio-structural and Systemic Causes
Specifically, the exam area examines the role of individualistic theories in explaining youth crime.What propels youths to commit delinquency is often a complex interplay of a variety of biological, genetic, and environmental factors which is further complicated by various reactions to environmental factors.
The ‘triad of youth justice’ (Case, 2018:2) reveals that the nature of ‘Youth Offending’ is defined and revised over time through the activities of various social, cultural, economic, political, professional, academic and media influences. It is shaped by how a society chooses to define (construct) ‘youth offending’ at any given point in time, which in turn can influence how youth offending is explained, which in turn can influence how it is responded to through the philosophies, systems, structures, strategies, processes and practices that constitute youth justice- construction of ‘childhood’. Definitions, explanations and responses as three interrelated and mutually-reinforcing elements working together in the social construction of youth offending and youth justice responses to it!
Over the last 200 years, a series of explanatory theories have been advocated which seek to identify-
•Causes
•Influences
•Predictors
•correlates
A significant number of these theories have privileged the study of young, working-class, white males as the archetypal ‘offender’. As a result, it is important to explore their limitations due to their implicit, “androcentric, ethnocentric and class-centric biases” (Case, 2018:51).
These dominant theories have been utilized to inform and shape the way we conceive of youth offending and have helped to shape youth justice responses tom it. As such, it is important to explore their validity!
The question requires you to:
You
will want to evaluate theories using the following questions:
Author:
Current:
Accuracy:
The approach has come to dominate assessment, planning and intervention tools for the identification of ‘factors’ in an attempt to predict ‘risk’
Onset
Asset
AssetPlus
Focus of both assessment and intervention shifted from the child to the general environment, the family, and the school environment.
The readily understandable findings of RFR have now become embedded in the Youth Justice system in terms of policy and practice and a ready set of targets for intervention.
In other words, the globally applicable concept of ‘risk factors’ and ‘protective factors’ has resulted in:
Risk factor research is diverse, theoretically and methodologically- however, such differences are under-explained or even ignored and as such their consequences have remained hidden from understanding. Such oversimplified conclusions are then adopted by politicians, policy makers,
which exacerbates the problem. Laub (2006) suggests that Criminologists
ignore ‘key facts’ that run contrary to own theoretical predictions.
Such theories mix, merge and fuse together concepts, arguments, research methods, evidence and explanations from more than one criminological theory:
-Within-theory
-Within-School
-Between-School
According to Case et al, (2017), this: “socio-political risk perspective began to gain popularity within criminology in the industrialised western world” (2017:511).
Enhanced Pathways Risk Factor Theories
Artefactual Risk Factor Theories
Social Control theories of crime
Sociobiological theories
Integrated risk factors theories are
arguably the hegemonic explanatory theories within criminology today- because
they have a particular way of conceptualising the causes of an influences on
crime- essentially through the simplistic quantification and measurement in
early life of factors that are assumed to predict future offending.
The strength of such ‘grand theories’ of crime had been the high level of empirical/evidential support due to the broad range of influences on crime considered by social control theories when compared to single factor or single school theories- however, they are unable to explain all crimes at all times.
The claims made by such ‘grand theories’ are now challenged by the prominent rise of artefactual risk factor theories.
Draws on the concept of 'Power'- "By pointing to power without analyzing its class basis and the nature of the state, [the sociologists of deviance and labeling theorists] transformed the actions of the powerful into an arbitrary flexing of muscle" (Young, 1978:13).
Labelling
Focus is on the activities of the powerless whilst obscuring their ability to exploit their own privileged position.
Crime as the product of socio-political conditions which are influenced by the political interests of those who seek to maintain their position.
Structural inequalities becomes institutionalized within the operation of the law and the wider working of the state.
Critical Theories
Power to evade criminalisation.
Power to Criminalise/De-criminalise certain forms of behaviour.
Positivism
Offered deterministic explanations of offending and perceived the offender as a predetermined actor (someone whose actions are predestined following exposure to certain influences).
Biological positivist theories mainly focused on the criminogenic potential of physical characteristics and genetic inheritance, moving towards latterly,
neuroscientific considerations of the role of brain development.
Crime occurs due to determined factors at the sociological and psychological levels.
Biological Positivism-
Crime can be treated and the individual rehabilitated.
Crime occurs due to determined factors at the physiological level and biological levels.
Classicism-
Have reconstructed the role of free will/rational choice as only one element of more holistic, multi-factor, integrated explanations- it is these which we will
explore in more detail. Linked to contemporary situational crime prevention.
Views ‘free will’ and ‘rational choice’ as mitigated (made less influential) by other factors in the lives of ‘vulnerable’ groups such as children, the mentally ill and the learning disabled (e.g. Akers, 1991: Wilson and Hernstein, 1985). As such- neo-classical explanations offer a compromise position between classical and individual positivist theories.
Gives rise to crime control strategies.
Crime occurs due to 'rational choice'