Youth Justice: Critical Readings / Edition 1

Youth Justice: Critical Readings / Edition 1

ISBN-10:
0761949143
ISBN-13:
9780761949145
Pub. Date:
05/24/2002
Publisher:
SAGE Publications
ISBN-10:
0761949143
ISBN-13:
9780761949145
Pub. Date:
05/24/2002
Publisher:
SAGE Publications
Youth Justice: Critical Readings / Edition 1

Youth Justice: Critical Readings / Edition 1

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Overview

Youth Justice: Critical Readings brings together for the first time the most influential international contributors to the emergent field of youth justice studies. This will be an essential sourcebook for students and teachers in the fields of criminology, youth studies, criminal justice, social work and social policy as well as for practitioners and managers in this increasingly important field of professional practice.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780761949145
Publisher: SAGE Publications
Publication date: 05/24/2002
Series: Published in association with The Open University
Edition description: First Edition
Pages: 476
Product dimensions: 6.69(w) x 9.53(h) x (d)

About the Author

John Muncie is Emeritus Professor of Criminology at the Open University, UK. He is the author of Youth and Crime (5th edition, Sage, 2021), and he has published widely on issues in comparative youth justice and children’s rights, including the co-edited companion volumes Youth Crime and Justice and Comparative Youth Justice (Sage, 2006). He has produced numerous Open University texts and readers, including Crime: Local and Global (Willan, 2010), Criminal Justice: Local and Global (Willan, 2010), The Problem of Crime (2nd edition, Sage, 2001), Crime Prevention and Community Safety (Sage, 2001) and Imprisonment: European Perspectives (Harvester, 1991). He has also contributed nine volumes to the The Sage Library of Criminology (Sage, 2007–2009). He is co-editor of the Sage journal Youth Justice: An International Journal.

Eugene Mc Laughlin is Professor of Criminology and co-director of the Centre for Crime and Justice Research. He is also a member of the Centre for Law Justice and Journalism. He completed his postgraduate criminology studies at the University of Cambridge and the University of Sheffield. Eugene has held various academic appointments including at the University of Hong Kong, the Open University and the University of Southampton. He has also been Visiting Professor at the Department of Sociology, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, New York, the Department of Communication Studies, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill and Distinguished Visiting Fellow at the Helsinki Collegium for Advanced Studies. He is an associate editor of Crime, Media and Cultureand is on the editorial board of Criminal Justice Matters. He has served on the editorial boards of the British Journal of Criminology, Critical Social Policy, the Howard Journal of Criminal Justice and was co-editor of Theoretical Criminology.

Table of Contents

Modes of Youth Governance - John Muncie and Gordon Hughes
Political Rationalities, Criminalization and Resistance
PART ONE: FOLK DEVILS: CONSTRUCTIONS AND RECONSTRUCTIONS OF YOUTH AND CRIME
Constructions and Reconstructions of British Childhood - Harry Hendrick
An Interpretative Survey, 1800 to the Present
Youth Crime and Moral Decline - Geoffrey Pearson
Permissiveness and Tradition
Lesser Breeds Without the Law - Paul Gilroy
Rethinking Moral Panic for Multi-Mediated Social Worlds - Angela Mc Robbie and Sarah Thornton
The Vilification and Pleasures of Youthful Transgression - Keith Hayward
PART TWO: THE ORIGINS OF YOUTH JUSTICE
Innocence and Experience - Margaret May
The Evolution of the Concept of Juvenile Delinquency in the Mid-Nineteenth Century
The Invention of Juvenile Delinquency in Early Nineteenth-Century England - Susan Magarey
The Three Rs - Repression, Rescue and Rehabilitation Ideologies of Control for Working-Class Youth - John Clarke
The Government of a Generation - Peter Rush
The Subject of Juvenile Delinquency
Reforming the Juvenile - Heather Shore
Gender, Justice and the Child Criminal in Nineteenth-Century England
PART THREE: POSITIVISM AND WELFARISM
The Triumph of Benevolence - Anthony Platt
The Origins of the Juvenile Justice System in the United States
Penal Strategies in a Welfare State - David Garland
On the Decriminalization of English Juvenile Courts - Anthony Bottoms
Children's Hearings and Children in Trouble - Janice Mc Ghee, Lorraine Waterhouse and Bill Whyte
Restorative Youth Jusitce - Loraine Gelsthorpe and Allison Morris
The Last Vestiges of Welfare?
PART FOUR: JUSTICE, DIVERSION AND RIGHTS
Wider, Stronger and Different Nets - James Austin and Barry Krisberg
The Dialectics of Criminal Justice Reform
Justice, Retribution and Children - Stewart Asquith
Whose Justice? The Politics of Juvenile Control - John Clarke
‘Troublesome Girls' - Annie Hudson
Towards Alternative Definitions and Policies
Challenging the Criminalization of Children and Young People - Phil Scraton and Deena Haydon
Securing a Rights-based Agenda
PART FIVE: DETENTION AND RETRIBUTION
Failure Never Matters - John Muncie
Detention Centres and the Politics of Deterrence
The Boot Camp and the Limits of Modern Penality - Jonathan Simon
The Reductionist Agenda - Andrew Rutherford
The Future of Imprisonment - Thomas Mathiesen
New Punitiveness - Barry Goldson
The Politics of Child Incarceration
PART SIX: RISK MANAGMENT AND PREVENTION
Corporatism - John Pratt
The Third Model of Juvenile Justice
The End of an Era - John Pitts
Understanding and Preventing Youth Crime - David Farrington
Expanding Realms of the New Penology - Kimberley Kempf-Leonard and Elicka Peterson
The Advent of Actuarial Justice for Juveniles
The Contemporary Politics of Youth Crime Prevention - Tim Newburn
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