This book aims to provide an understanding of youth offending
and policy and practice responses, particularly the risk-focused
approaches that have underpinned much recent academic research,
youth justice policy and interventions designed to reduce and
prevent problem behaviour. There has been growing concern, however,
on the part of critical criminologists and others, about the
theoretical, epistemological, methodological and ethical bases of
risk-focused research with young people. They have pointed
particularly to the overly-deterministic and prescriptive nature of
the risk factor paradigm.
This book aims to meet the need for an exploration of youth
justice and youth offending which takes account of the origins and
contemporary manifestations of risk-focused work with young people.
It analyses the influence of concepts of risk upon policy
development in both England and Wales as well as internationally,
highlighting tensions between the proponents of risk factor
research and methodological and ethical criticisms of the risk
factor paradigm. It will be essential reading for anybody wishing
to understand risk factor explanation of crime, contemporary youth
justice policy and responses to offending behaviour.
General
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