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ISBN
978-0-230-28053-3
Idioma
spa
Clasificación DEWEY
364.36 FRA-p
Autor
France, Alan, , autor
Título
A political ecology of youth and crime / Alan France, Dorothy Bottrell, Derrick Armstrong.
Lugar de publicación
Basingstoke, Hampshire Palgrave Macmillan 2012
Descripción
viii, 203 p. ; 23 cm.
Tipo de medio digital o análogo
sin medio rdamedia
Medio de almacenamiento
volumen rdacarrier
Bibliografía
Includes bibliographical references (p. [179]-193) and indexes.
Nota de contenido
Part 1: A theory of the political ecology of youth and crime. Introduction ; A Political Ecology of Human Development ; Power and Political Ecology ; Human Development and Social Identity ; Conclusion. -- Part 2 :The ecology of place and space. Introduction ; Social Disorganization in Disadvantaged Neighborhoods ; The Normalization of Crime, Risk and Danger in Place and Spaces ; The Ecology of 'Protection' in High Crime Areas ; Social Control and Regulation in High Crime Areas ; 'Feeling Safe' in Risky and Dangerous Places ; Place, Space and 'Disrupted' Lives ; Conclusion, -- Part 3 :Being criminal. Introduction ; Pro-social and Anti-social Childhood ; 'Ordinary Lives' ; Being Criminal: 'Things' Happen ; The 'Situating' and Management of Boredom ; 'Being a kid' and Social Ecology ; 'In the system' ; Assessment in Youth Justice ; Early Interventions for those 'at risk' ; Conclusion. -- Part 4: The ecology and culture of peer groups. Introduction ; Peer Groups as 'Delinquency Training' ; Peer Groups and Friendships ; Friends, 'Others' and the Contexts of Peer Relations ; Hanging Out, Going Out and 'Chilling Out' ; Peer Back-up on the Streets ; Peers, Conflict and Empowerment in School ; Changing Peer Groups ; Conclusion. -- Part 5: Education and crime. Introduction ; Accounts of Low Achievement and Low Commitment ; Permanent Exclusion from Mainstream Schools ; Acquiring Special Educational Needs ; Young People's Views on PRU's and Special Schools ; Alternative Provision and Pathways ; Conclusion. -- Part 6: The ecology of family relationships. Introduction ; Family Risk Factors in Developmental Criminology ; Young People and Families: Routines and Relationships ; Home Rules ; Family Roles and Young People's Offending ; The Impact of Offending and Interventions on Families ; Family Adversities ; Young People, Families, Risk and Resilience ; Conclusion. -- Part 7 :The ecology of being 'in care'. Introduction ; Being in Care as a 'risk factor' ; In and Out of Care ; The Nature of 'being in Care' ; The Social Ecology of Care: Diversity and Trajectories ; Managing Identities in Care ; The Importance of Peers and Friends ; The Social Care System and Risk ; Professional Intervention ; Conclusion. -- Conclusion: youth, crime and 'ordinary life' through an ecological lens. Ecological Impacts and the Bounding of 'Choice' ; The 'Nested' Qualities of Social Action ; Resilience as a Social Resource ; Power and Injustice in Political Ecology.
Nota de Resumen
"This book proposes a new conceptual framework for theorizing young people's relationship with crime. It emerges from a critique of the narrow approach advocated by developmental criminology and argues for an analysis that recognizes and includes the important contribution that the young themselves can make to the theorizing and understanding of their relationship with crime. Explicitly using the voices of a group of working class young people who are defined as "a social problem," this approach emphasis's how criminal identities and pathways are strongly influenced by the interactions embedded in political ecological systems and relationships. Drawing upon the work of the social psychologist Urie Bronfenbrenner and sociologist Pierre Bourdieu, this book explores young people's "nested" and "political" ecological relationships with crime. The Political Ecology of Youth and Crime examines the impacts of these relationships through an empirical investigation of the important "places" and "spaces" in young people's lives; in their social relationships with peers and family members; and within formal institutional systems such as education, youth justice and social care. This book makes an important new contribution to how we understand the relationship between youth and crime in the contexts of sociology, criminology, social psychology and education."--Publisher's website.
Materia
Delincuencia Juvenil
Crimen -- Aspectos Sociológicos
Criminología
Autor Secundario
Armstrong, Derrick, 1953- , autor
Bottrell, Dorothy , autor
etiq. info
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100 1 |aFrance, Alan,|eautor
245 12|aA political ecology of youth and crime|cAlan France, Dorothy Bottrell, Derrick Armstrong.
264 |aBasingstoke, Hampshire |bPalgrave Macmillan|c2012
300 |aviii, 203 p. |c23 cm.
336 |atexto |2rdacontent
337 |asin medio |2rdamedia
338 |avolumen |2rdacarrier
504 |aIncludes bibliographical references (p. [179]-193) and indexes.
505 0 |aPart 1: A theory of the political ecology of youth and crime. Introduction ; A Political Ecology of Human Development ; Power and Political Ecology ; Human Development and Social Identity ; Conclusion. -- Part 2 :The ecology of place and space. Introduction ; Social Disorganization in Disadvantaged Neighborhoods ; The Normalization of Crime, Risk and Danger in Place and Spaces ; The Ecology of 'Protection' in High Crime Areas ; Social Control and Regulation in High Crime Areas ; 'Feeling Safe' in Risky and Dangerous Places ; Place, Space and 'Disrupted' Lives ; Conclusion, -- Part 3 :Being criminal. Introduction ; Pro-social and Anti-social Childhood ; 'Ordinary Lives' ; Being Criminal: 'Things' Happen ; The 'Situating' and Management of Boredom ; 'Being a kid' and Social Ecology ; 'In the system' ; Assessment in Youth Justice ; Early Interventions for those 'at risk' ; Conclusion. -- Part 4: The ecology and culture of peer groups. Introduction ; Peer Groups as 'Delinquency Training' ; Peer Groups and Friendships ; Friends, 'Others' and the Contexts of Peer Relations ; Hanging Out, Going Out and 'Chilling Out' ; Peer Back-up on the Streets ; Peers, Conflict and Empowerment in School ; Changing Peer Groups ; Conclusion. -- Part 5: Education and crime. Introduction ; Accounts of Low Achievement and Low Commitment ; Permanent Exclusion from Mainstream Schools ; Acquiring Special Educational Needs ; Young People's Views on PRU's and Special Schools ; Alternative Provision and Pathways ; Conclusion. -- Part 6: The ecology of family relationships. Introduction ; Family Risk Factors in Developmental Criminology ; Young People and Families: Routines and Relationships ; Home Rules ; Family Roles and Young People's Offending ; The Impact of Offending and Interventions on Families ; Family Adversities ; Young People, Families, Risk and Resilience ; Conclusion. -- Part 7 :The ecology of being 'in care'. Introduction ; Being in Care as a 'risk factor' ; In and Out of Care ; The Nature of 'being in Care' ; The Social Ecology of Care: Diversity and Trajectories ; Managing Identities in Care ; The Importance of Peers and Friends ; The Social Care System and Risk ; Professional Intervention ; Conclusion. -- Conclusion: youth, crime and 'ordinary life' through an ecological lens. Ecological Impacts and the Bounding of 'Choice' ; The 'Nested' Qualities of Social Action ; Resilience as a Social Resource ; Power and Injustice in Political Ecology.
520 |a"This book proposes a new conceptual framework for theorizing young people's relationship with crime. It emerges from a critique of the narrow approach advocated by developmental criminology and argues for an analysis that recognizes and includes the important contribution that the young themselves can make to the theorizing and understanding of their relationship with crime. Explicitly using the voices of a group of working class young people who are defined as "a social problem," this approach emphasis's how criminal identities and pathways are strongly influenced by the interactions embedded in political ecological systems and relationships. Drawing upon the work of the social psychologist Urie Bronfenbrenner and sociologist Pierre Bourdieu, this book explores young people's "nested" and "political" ecological relationships with crime. The Political Ecology of Youth and Crime examines the impacts of these relationships through an empirical investigation of the important "places" and "spaces" in young people's lives; in their social relationships with peers and family members; and within formal institutional systems such as education, youth justice and social care. This book makes an important new contribution to how we understand the relationship between youth and crime in the contexts of sociology, criminology, social psychology and education."--Publisher's website.
650 0|aDelincuencia Juvenil
650 0|aCrimen|xAspectos Sociológicos
650 0|aCriminología
700 1 |aArmstrong, Derrick,|d1953-|eautor
700 1 |aBottrell, Dorothy|eautor