图书简介
Designed for undergraduate juvenile delinquency courses, this book actively involves students in the literature of the discipline, presents the field in a format that is accessible, understandable, and enjoyable, and is edited by well-known scholars who are experienced researchers and teachers.’’’’+ The readings in this anthology have been very carefully edited and pruned by the Editors so that undergraduate students can easily read them without getting bogged down or confused and lost in the technical, methodological details.’’’’+ At no additional cost, we have included 5 substantial data analysis exercises spread throughout the book. These exercises not only teach students the basic of SPSS, the ’standard’ data analysis software in social science, but also show them how they can test the delinquency theories and propositions covered in the reader, using current delinquency data packaged with the book. This absolutely unique feature is structured into fill-in-the-blank exercise sets that are easy to grade for large numbers of students by a single instructor.’’’’+ Over 150 very good questions have been put together for the readings so that instructors can easily test, even in large courses, whether or not their students are keeping up with the reading.’’’’+ A separate instructor’s manual (with more tests) is also available.’’
PART ONE: WHAT IS DELINQUENCY? THE HISTORY AND DEFINITIONS OF DELINQUENCY \\ Inventing the Stubborn ChildJ. Sutton \\ The Rise of the Child-Saving MovementA. Platt \\ The Juvenile Court Law in Cook County Illinois, 1899Hon. R.S. Tuthill \\ Title 13, Revised Code of Washington: The Juvenile Justice Act, 1994 \\ PART TWO: HOW IS DELINQUENCY MEASURED? THE OBSERVATION AND MEASUREMENT OF DELINQUENCY \\ Prevalence, Incidence, Rates and Other Descriptive MeasuresP.E. Tracy, Jr. \\ The Accuracy of Official and Self-Report Meaures of DelinquencyM. J. Hindelang, et al \\ Chronic Offenders: The Missing Cases in Self-Report Delinquency ResearchS.A. Cernkovich, et al \\ PART THREE: WHO ARE THE DELINQUENTS? THE DISTRIBUTION AND CORRELATES OF DELINQUENCY \\ Age, Sex and the Versatility of Delinquent InvolvementsM.J. Hindelang \\ Juvenile Offender Prevalence, Incidence and Arrest Rates by RaceD. Huizinga & D.S. Elliot \\ Social Class and CrimeJ.G. Weis \\ Reconsidering the Relationship between SES and Delinquency: Causation but Not CorrelationB.R. Entner Wright, et al \\ Family \\ Families and Delinquency: A Meta-Analysis of the Impact of Broken HomesL.E. Wells & J.H. Rankin \\ School \\ The Effect of Dropping Out of High School on Subsequent Criminal BehaviorT.P. Thornberry, et al \\ Peers \\ Age, Peers, and DelinquencyM. Warr \\ Gangs \\ Violent Crimes in City GangsW.B. Miller \\ Social Learning Theory, Self-Reported Delinquency, and Youth GangsL.T. Winfree, Jr., et al \\ Drugs \\ Delinquency and Substance Use Among Inner-City StudentsJ. Fagan, et al \\ PART FOUR: WHAT CAUSES DELINQUENCY? HOW IS IT CONTROLLED? THE INTERDEPENDENCE OF THEORY AND PRACTICE \\ Psychological Control, Early Identification, and Intervention \\ Unraveling Juvenile DelinquencyS. Glueck & E. Glueck \\ Unraveling Families and Delinquency: A Reanalysis of the Gluecks’ DataJ.H. Laub & R.J. Sampson \\ The Cambridge-Somerville Youth StudyE. Powers & S. Witmer \\ A Thirty-Year Follow-Up of Treatment EffectsJ. McCord \\ Risk Factors and Prevention \\ Risk Behavior in Adolescence: A Psychosocial Framework for Understanding and ActionR. Jessor \\ Early Childhood InterventionE.Zigler, et al \\ Ecology, Enculturation, and Community Organization \\ Deviant Places: A Theory of the Ecology of CrimeR. Stark \\ Scoial Disorganization and Theories of Crime and DelinquencyR.J. Bursik, Jr. \\ The Chicago Area ProjectS. Kobrin \\ The Chicago Area Project RevisitedS. Schlossman & M. Sedlak \\ Cutural Deviance and Gang Work \\ Lower-Class Culture as a Generating Milieu of Gang DelinquencyW.B. Miller \\ Social Sources of Chinese Gang DelinquencyK.L. Chin \\ Why the United States Has Failed to Solve Its Youth Gang ProblemW.B. Miller \\ Social Learning and Behavior Modification \\ A Differential Association-Reinforcement Theory of Criminal BehaviorR.L. Burgess & R.L. Akers \\ The Role of Peers in the Complex Etiology of Adolescent Drug UseR.E. Johnson, et al \\ Behavioral Approaches to Treatment in the Crime and Delinquency FieldC.J. Braukmann, et al \\ Assessing the Effects of School-Based Drug Education: A 6-Year Multilevel Analysis of Project D.A.R.E.D.P. Rosenbaum & G.S. Hanson \\ Opportunity, Strain, and Rehabilitation/Reintegration \\ Illegitimate Means, Anomie, and Deviant BehaviorR.A. Cloward \\ A Revised Strain Theory of DelinquencyR. Agnew \\ The Natural History of an Applied Theory: Differential Opportunity and Mobilization for YouthJ.F. Short, Jr. \\ The Provo Experiment in Delinquency RehabilitationL.T. Empey & J. Rabow \\ Social Control, Social Development, and Prevention \\ A Control Theory of DelinquencyT. Hirschi \\ The Empirical Status of Hirschi’s Control TheoryK.L. Kempf \\ Preventing Delinquency: The Social Development ModelJ.G. Weis & J.D. Hawkins \\ The Prevention of Serious Delinquency: What to Do?J.G. Weis & J. Sederstrom \\ Reducing Early Childhood Aggression: Results of a Primary Prevention ProgramJ.D. Hawkins, et al \\ Labeling, Diversion, and Radical Nonintervention \\ An Overview of Labeling TheoryE. Schur \\ The Labeling Perspective and Delinquency: An Elaboration of the Theory and an Assessment of the EvidenceR. Paternoster & L. Iovanni \\ Reflected Appraisals, Parental Labeling, and DelinquencyR.L. Matsueda \\ Diversion in Juvenile JusticeE.M. Lemert \\ PART FIVE: JUVENILE JUSTICE REFORM \\ Judicial Reform \\ Juvenile Court Theory and Impact in Historical PerspectiveH.H. Clark, Jr. \\ The Legal Legacy \\ Beyond Gault: Injustice and the ChildP. Lerman \\ In re Gault Revisited: A Cross-State Comparison of the Right to Counsel in Juvenile CourtB.C. Feld \\ The System Legacy \\ Responding to Juvenile Crime: Lessons LearnedP.W. Greenwood \\ Gender Bias in Juvenile Justice Processing: Implications of the JJDP ActD.M. Bishop & C.E. Frazier \\ Race, Gender, and the Prehearing Detention of JuvenilesK. Kempf-Leonard \\ The Comparative Advantage of Juvenile Versus Criminal Court Sanctions on Recidivism Among Adolescent Felony OffendersJ. Fagan \\ The Program Legacy \\ An Analysis of Juvenile Correctional TreatmentS.P. Lab & J.T. Whitehead \\ Alternative Placements for Juvenile Offenders: Results From the Evaluation of the Nokomis Challenge ProgramE.P. Deschenes & P.W. Greenwood \\ A Survey of Juvenile Electronic Monitoring and Home Confinement ProgramsJ.B. Vaughn \\ Boot Camps: A Critique and a Proposed AlternativeA.W. Salerno \\ Prospects \\ The future of Juvenile Justice Policy and ResearchL.E. Ohlin \\ Abolish the Juvenile Court: Youthfulness, Criminal Responsibility, and Sentencing PolicyB.C. Field \\ Suggested Readings \\ Index
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