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Prevention and youth crime: Is early intervention working?


Prevention and youth crime: Is early intervention working?

Paperback by Blyth, Maggie (Member of the Parole Board for England and Wales); Solomon, Enver (Centre for Crime and Justice Studies, King''s College, London)

Prevention and youth crime: Is early intervention working?

£20.99

ISBN:
9781847422637
Publication Date:
19 Nov 2008
Language:
English
Publisher:
Bristol University Press
Imprint:
Policy Press
Pages:
136 pages
Format:
Paperback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 16 - 24 May 2024
Prevention and youth crime: Is early intervention working?

Description

The 2008 UK government Youth Crime Action Plan emphasises prevention and early intervention in different aspects of work with young people who offend or are considered to be 'at risk' of offending. Much of this approach includes targeted work with families and work to reduce the numbers of young people entering the youth justice system. This report takes a critical look at early intervention policies. Through contributions from leading experts on youth work and criminal justice it considers the development of integrated and targeted youth support services and the implications for practice of early intervention policies; analyses the causes of serious violent crime through consideration of issues that address gangs and guns; provides an evaluation of the government's early intervention strategy through the examination of its Sure Start programme and other family initiatives; identifies the psychobiological effects of violence on children and links them to problem behaviour; considers the impacts of family intervention projects and parenting work and compares approaches to early intervention across different jurisdictions and examines the lessons for practice in England and Wales.

Contents

Introduction ~ Enver Solomon and Maggie Blyth; Integrated or targeted youth support services: an essay on 'prevention' ~ Howard Williamson; Intervening in gang-affected neighbourhoods ~ John Pitts; Family intervention projects and the efficacy of parenting interventions ~ Judy Nixon and Sadie Parr; Early intervention and prevention: lessons from the Sure Start programme ~ Karen Clarke; Attachment research and the origins of violence: a story of damaged brains and damaged minds ~ Dr Felicity de Zulueta; Early intervention in the youth justice sphere: a knowledge-based critique ~ Barry Goldson; European perspectives on prevention ~ Rob Allen; Conclusion ~ Maggie Blyth and Enver Solomon.

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