Sunday, August 18, 2019
Relation of Crime and Family Essays -- Sociology Essays Papers Crimina
   Crime is sometimes blamed on the family, with poor     parenting, lack of discipline and family breakdown often associated     with youth crime. A recurrent theme in academic research has been to     investigate the relationship between delinquency and a range of family     related factors. Early studies explored child-rearing behaviour,     parental discipline, the criminal histories of parents and family size     and income. Popular theories in the 1950s and 1960s related juvenile     delinquency to material deprivation, broken homes and to the growing     number of ââ¬Ëlatch keyââ¬â¢ children who were left unsupervised after school     while their mothers went to work. All of these presaged current     concerns with discipline and the role of single-parent families. What     has emerged from this research is that some family factors are related     to the likelihood of delinquency but that they must be considered in     the context of the socio-economic circumstances of the family and the     others factors such as school and the peer group. The following     factors have emerged as particularly important.       Parental discipline and supervision       Parental discipline has always been seen as a major factor underlying     youth crime and it was found that inconsistent and erratic discipline     are more likely to be associated with delinquency than lax or strict     discipline (West and Farrington 1973, 1977). More recent studies have     focused on the quality of parental supervision, often measured by     whether parents know where their children are when they are not at     home. A Home Office study in 1995, for example, found that supervision     was strongly related to offending with higher numbers of those who     were no...              ...ng number of people who are able to work but choose not     to, live in a ââ¬Ëdifferent worldââ¬â¢ from others. They do not obtain good     habits and discipline and their values contaminate ââ¬Ëthe life of entire     neighbourhoodsââ¬â¢ (Murray 1996:p123). Men in such communities cannot     support families, leading to high rates of illegitimacy, and seek     alternative, destructive means of proving that they are men. Whole     communities are devastated by crime and young men look up to criminal     role models.       Whether or not the underclass exists, most agree that industrial     restructuring has led to the growth of communities within which the     majority of inhabitants are excluded from work and its associated     benefits, and that these are also characterised by high amounts of     property crime, youth crime and illegal drug use (Davies, Croall &     Tyrer 1999).                        
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