|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
Criminal Careers follows the lives and criminal behaviours of 2,397
people in Poland who as juveniles committed a crime and received a
form of punishment from the juvenile court between the late 1980s
and the year 2000. Through combining quantitative and qualitative
research, their criminal careers, the differences between men and
women, risk factors, and reasons for nondesistance are analysed.
Uniquely, the authors have used an extensive database of former
juveniles, in which as many as 40% were women. This book therefore
makes a comparison between women and men in terms of their future
life paths. Additionally, the researched group consisted of
teenagers from two different periods: the 1980s (the transition
generation) and 2000 (the millennial generation), which in the
context of Central and Eastern European countries means that they
entered adulthood in completely different realities. These
differences are therefore also explored in depth within the book.
By focusing on Poland, the book provides a different perspective to
criminal career research, which is generally limited to a few
countries in Western Europe and the United States. The book will be
of great interest to academics and students who are developing
their own research in the fields of criminal careers, juvenile
delinquency, and antisocial behaviours by young people. It will
also appeal to professionals, including juvenile judges, probation
officers, staff in correctional facilities and social
rehabilitation institutions, social workers and employees of
nonprofit organisations that support juveniles, people in crisis,
and prisoners or exprisoners.
Criminality has accompanied social life from the outset. It has
appeared at every stage of the development of every community,
regardless of organisation, form of government or period in
history. This work presents the views of criminologists from
Central Europe on the phenomenon of criminality as a component of
social and political reality. Despite the far advanced
homogenisation of culture and the coming together of the countries
that make up the European Union, criminality is not easily captured
by statistics and simple comparisons. There can be huge variation
not only on crime reporting systems and information on convicts but
also on definitions of the same crimes and their formulations in
the criminal codes of the individual European countries. This book
fills a gap in the English-language criminological literature on
the causes and determinants of criminality in Central Europe.
Poland, as the largest country in the region, whose political
post-war path has been similar to the other countries in this part
of Europe, is subject to an exhaustive and original look at
criminality as part of the political and social reality. The
authors offer a contribution to the debate in the social and
criminal policy of the state over the problems of criminality and
how to control it.
Criminal Careers follows the lives and criminal behaviours of 2,397
people in Poland who as juveniles committed a crime and received a
form of punishment from the juvenile court between the late 1980s
and the year 2000. Through combining quantitative and qualitative
research, their criminal careers, the differences between men and
women, risk factors, and reasons for nondesistance are analysed.
Uniquely, the authors have used an extensive database of former
juveniles, in which as many as 40% were women. This book therefore
makes a comparison between women and men in terms of their future
life paths. Additionally, the researched group consisted of
teenagers from two different periods: the 1980s (the transition
generation) and 2000 (the millennial generation), which in the
context of Central and Eastern European countries means that they
entered adulthood in completely different realities. These
differences are therefore also explored in depth within the book.
By focusing on Poland, the book provides a different perspective to
criminal career research, which is generally limited to a few
countries in Western Europe and the United States. The book will be
of great interest to academics and students who are developing
their own research in the fields of criminal careers, juvenile
delinquency, and antisocial behaviours by young people. It will
also appeal to professionals, including juvenile judges, probation
officers, staff in correctional facilities and social
rehabilitation institutions, social workers and employees of
nonprofit organisations that support juveniles, people in crisis,
and prisoners or exprisoners.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
8 Months Left
James Patterson, Mike Lupica
Paperback
R370
R149
Discovery Miles 1 490
|