Title: CC200 Youth Justice
1CC200Youth Justice
- The Rise and Fall of Delinquency
- Chapter One
2The Public Issue
- Over the last twenty years, youth crime has been
the focus of public concern and discourse. - Canada-wide, newspaper headlines warned their
readers of a serious crime problem if immediate
steps were not taken. - Beyond the headlines, newspapers have
consistently carried horrific accounts of violent
criminal deeds carried out by young Canadians.
3- By the close of the 1990s, media headlines were
fuelling public fear and concern regarding
violent crimes committed by girls. - School violence was also added to the growing
list of horrific youth behaviors. - News coverage of violent crimes is not surprising
think of the old saying in media if it bleeds,
it leads.
4- What may be surprising is the amount of coverage
that youth crime generates in the media, when
those who study crime in society are well aware
that adult crime far surpasses youth crime, both
in quality and severity. - It is also surprising when one looks at the
proportion of youth crime that is violent to that
which is not.
5Questions to consider
- According to recent police statistics (2005), the
rate of violent youth crime has remained
relatively stable since 1992 and actually
decreased by 2 percent in 2004. - Why, then does the public believe that violent
youth crime is on the rise? - What potential impact has this belief had on
legislation regarding youth crime?
6- Media coverage along with personal experiences,
in some cases, prompted many Canadians to express
their concerns about out-of-control youth and
criminal behaviors. - The general public consensus regarding the Young
Offenders Act (YOA) was that it was ineffective
in curbing youth crime, that it was too lenient,
and that it needed to be over-hauled.
7- Youth crime became a focal point for politicians
during the 1993 federal election. - As a result, the YOA was revised three times
before being replaced in April of 2003 by the
Youth Criminal Justice Act. - Even with the implementation of the new Act, the
flow of media on violent youth and youth crime
did not slow down, nor did the rhetoric of
politicians youth crime was still a major issue
in the federal election of 2006.
8- The same old new issue is the ability of the
new legislation to offer more than a slap on the
wrist for youth engaged in criminal and violent
behaviors. - If we are to believe media accounts and coverage
of the new Act, we could conclude that the Act
has failed, that nothing is new, and that youth
justice is still a slap on the wrist.
9Two Sides to the Same Old Debate1995-2005
- Part of the Liberal federal governments 1995 YOA
reforms involved a Strategy for Reform of the
complete youth justice system. - An important part of this process was the
implementation of public forums across Canada to
discuss the issue of youth crime, to propose
potential solutions, and to make recommendations
to the House of Commons Standing Committee on
Justice and Legal Affairs.
10- The core of the debate centered around the
question of whether the YOA effectively
controlled youth crime. - The public was clearly divided into two camps
youth advocates and the law-and-order advocates.
11Youth Advocate Position
- This camp included social workers, lawyers, and
other front-line youth workers and viewed
children and youth as victims in need of
protection. - They believed that neither the YOA nor children
were the problem. - For this group, the important issues were those
related to the difficulties that youth encounter
in an increasingly complex society.
12- This perspective focuses on the current economic,
social, and political realities that can be a
tremendous hardship for some young people and
their families. - Economic and/or social problems may exacerbate
other problems with families and some young
people are forced to leave home as a matter of
survival.
13- Youth advocates were fundamentally concerned with
the problems experienced by young people rather
than youth crime. - It was their opinion that youth crime had been
exaggerated and misrepresented in most public
accounts, particularly by the media.
14The Law-and-Order Argument
- The other perspective was the one most often seen
in media presentations. - This law-and-order group viewed children and
youth accused of crime as an enemy from whom
law-abiding citizens (adults) needed protection. - This group included police officers, store
security personnel, small-business owners, and
home-owners associations.
15- They viewed youth as out-of-control and argued
that both youth and the YOA were problems. - They argued for a get tough on crime policy and
called tougher legislation to deal with the
perceived problem.
16Youth were a problem because
- They were said to lack respect.
- They lacked a sense of responsibility.
- They were increasingly involved in violent
criminal behavior.
17The YOA was problematic because
- Youth could not be identified.
- Youth were not punished for their crimes.
- Youth had more rights than their victims.
- Youth were too protected by the YOA.
18- Ten years later, people are again gathering to
discuss the youth justice system, only this time
it is the Youth Criminal Justice Act that is
under scrutiny. - It is interesting that even though the
participants in the forum have changed the focus
is the same the youth justice system. - The same arguments are still being put forward by
youth advocates and law-and-order advocates. - So, why does appear that the more things change
the more they remain the same?
19The Good Old Days
- Perhaps the most basic assumption influencing
public views regarding youth crime is the notion
that todays youth are more engaged in violent
and criminal behaviors. - Yet crime statistics do not support this idea.
- Canadian crime statistics dating back to 1885
indicate that youth have always been involved in
criminal activity, including violent crime.
20- It is hard to find historical data on youth crime
and public responses prior to 1885 because youth
crime statistics were not always kept in the same
manner that they are today. - There are no consistent prison records, for
example, until 1885 when Kingston Penitentiary
the first Canadian prison opened.
21- Most Canadian criminologist studying in this area
have relied more on the work of historians than
criminologist to develop an understanding of
youth crime and justice in the early years. - So, what have we discovered?
22Lawless and Disobedient Youth 17th and 18th
Centuries.
- Information on youth involvement in crime in
Canada during this time period is sketchy. - What information we can uncover indicates that
concerns were expressed about youth as a problem
in North American colonies as early as the late
17th century.
23- Throughout recorded history, children in European
societies have had a different legal status than
adults. - In essence, what this means is simply that they
had no legal rights. - Infanticide, child labor, and child slavery were
common. - The idea that children had legal rights or that
they had legal rights to protection from adults
did not emerge until the 19th century.
24- Colonial administrators brought traditions and
legal codes to the New World. - The first European settler executed in the
territories of Canada was a 16 year old female
who was convicted of theft in 1640. - However, in some cases, young persons were
treated with more leniency. For example
25- In 1672 a 13 year old girl who had helped her
parents murder her husband escaped execution
because of her age. - Instead, she was required to watch the execution
of her parents.
26Colonial Public Issue
- The issue for colonial administration in the
territories of Canada was the freedom and
independence that young people had relative to
their counterparts in the Old World. - In Europe, children were subservient to adults
and dependent on parents. - This was not always the case in the New World.
27- In the largely rural nature of the population in
New France, parents were dependent on the
childrens labor for economic survival and
success. - Therefore, rural and working-class children in
the New World had considerable independence from
their parents. - In the view of the colonial administrators,
parental authority was significantly undermined
by this arrangement and this lack of authority
was evidenced in young peoples behaviors.
28Causes and solutions An Era of Control and
Punishment
- Another identified issue concerned the fur trade
an extremely lucrative business at this time. - The system of inheritance in place at the time,
dictated that only the eldest son could inherit
family farms. - Other children had to look elsewhere for a
livelihood.
29- The fur trade provided this opportunity for many
young men as well as promising freedom, adventure
and a lucrative career. - According to Carrigan (1991), the fur trade was
rife with fraud, immorality, theft, assault, and
murder and teenagers probably contributed their
fair share to the lawlessness (pg.204).
30- Another very real source of problems came from
the active promotion of immigration to the New
World. - Impoverished Europeans had been lured to the New
World with promises of a better, more prosperous
life. - However, once they arrived, many found
unemployment, sickness, destitution, or death.
31- Untold quantities of children found themselves in
desperate circumstances because of the hardships
faced by their parents in the New World. - Some parents died while others simply abandoned
their children.
32- In the 18th century, a variety of measured were
proposed as solutions to youth crime. - More schools, more priests, and confinement to
settled parts of the colony were as informal
solutions uniquely suited to the political,
social, and economic structures of this time,
other proposals such as fines and punishments for
parents and offenders, military justice, and an
increase of garrison troops has a familiar modern
ring to them.
33A Question of Immorality the 19th Century
- Urban problems associated with immigration and
poverty continued and worsened throughout the
19th century. - The Irish famine exacerbated the orphan problem
in Canada by increasing the number of people
emigrating to the New World. - By the mid-1800s, British and Canadian
authorities had implemented policies to send
Britains orphaned, poor, and destitute children
to Canada as indentured servants.
34Definition
- Indentured servant a bonded laborer - a laborer
under contract to work for an employer for a
specific amount of time, about 7-8 years, to pay
off a passage to a new country or home. - Typically the employer provided little if any
monetary pay, but was responsible for
accommodation, food, other essentials, and
training. - Upon completion of the term of the contract the
laborer sometimes received a lump sum payment
such as a parcel of land and was free to farm or
take up trade of his own.
35- Between 1883 and 1903, more than 95,000 children
came to Canada under the sponsorship of child
immigration agencies. - Many of these children found only a life of
misery and harsh working conditions in Canada. - Some children abandoned their contracts (a
punishable offence) which left them dependent on
their own resources for survival.
36- Life was also very challenging for the poor in
Victorian Canada. - Many did not have work, and those who were
fortunate enough to secure employment were
often at the mercy of unscrupulous employers. - What factor might have contributed to being at
the mercy of employers?
37- Girls were especially vulnerable.
- Those working as domestics and servants for
shopkeepers were often forced to service male
customers in order to keep their jobs. - They were not free to leave the job because they
would forfeit a letter of reference without which
they would not be able to secure another job.
38The Victorian Public Issue
- By the mid-1800s, the urban middle-class in North
America began to voice concerns about the
morality of the poor and destitute. - Various urban relief agencies were created in
cities across the continent to address issues
such as illiteracy, prostitution, alcohol abuse,
juvenile delinquency, and family squalor.
39- The discourse surrounding those agencies and
their activities served to define problems, their
causes, and seemingly appropriate solutions. - During the second half of the 19th century, the
issue of youth crime seemed to focus on the issue
of morality.
40- High levels of poverty and the accompanying
destitution brought on by a lack of employment
opportunities and severe working conditions meant
that high numbers of children and young people
were spending a significant portion of their days
on the streets where they engaged in begging,
stealing, and selling whatever they could to make
a living.
41- The public issue however was not poverty.
- It was the morality of the impoverished working
class. - The parents of these children were considered to
be immoral and unable and/or unwilling to control
their children. - Much of the morality discourse about youth
problems centered around discussions about
children on the streets and what could be done
about them.
42- Young women on the streets were also the focus of
grave concern. - However, their safety was not the issue or
concern. - Instead the focus was on the perceived danger to
their morality.
43Causes and Solutions An Era of Social Reform
- A reform movement swept across North America in
the later half of the 19th century. - The fundamental elements of this movement were a
focus on the individual, a wide-spread belief in
the goodness of humanitarian sentiments, and a
belief in the ability of the state and
professionals to reform individuals.
44- This, in essence, marked the emergence of the
rehabilitative philosophy. - Reformers argued that it made no sense to fight
evil with evil by imprisoning and punishing
criminal offenders. - Instead it would much more effective in the
long-run to fight evil with good by attempting to
rehabilitate individuals who had committed crimes.
45- This reform policy applied most readily to
children and young people. - Child savers found it easy to believe that if
young enough, a child could be saved from a
life of crime through interventions designed to
correct the factors believed to influence
children in the development of criminal ways.
46- Along with this belief came the conclusion that
placing children in prison with adult criminals
was not the way to combat the problem of youth
crime. - Prisons were viewed by many as schools of crime
where children would associate with, and pick up
the habits of, hardened adult criminals.
47- One hundred years earlier, it had been argued
that improper parenting was the cause of youth
problems. - By the end of the 19th century improper parenting
was again emerging in public discourse as the
primary cause of youth crime. - However, this time, the claims took on another
dimension.
48- Youth problems were no longer attributed to a
lack of parental discipline of loss of authority. - Instead, neglectful and/or immoral parents were
blamed for youth problems and criminal behaviors. - Poor, working-class parents were viewed as
inadequate or as bad role models for their
children. - Sound familiar?
49- By the end of the 19th century, the juvenile
delinquent had been born. - Growing up on the street became the subject of
public condemnation and regulation and a
life-style a street culture had become the
most common definition of juvenile delinquency
(Houston, 1982, p.131).
50The Era of the Juvenile Delinquent The 20th
Century
- The turn of the century saw continued increases
in population and in the rapid growth of cities. - This was accompanied by a variety of social
issues, including increases in youth crime. - Simply put, as cities grew and commercial
activities expanded so did the opportunities for
criminal activities and different types of crime.
51- Statistics for all of Canada indicate dramatic
increases in youth crime rates throughout the
20th century. - Convictions of children under 16 increased by
over 124 percent between 1911 and 1921, and by
over 67 percent between 1921 and 1931. - During the 1920s, drug use and drug dealing
surfaced as a social issue and led to a number of
arrests and convictions of young people in Canada.
52- Increases in the numbers of youth involved in
criminal activities do not necessarily mean that
young people were or are behaving in a more
criminal manner. - As the number of people in a population
increases, the amount of crime will also increase
simply because there are more people to engage in
criminal behavior.
53- A comparative technique is to examine what
proportion of all crime is accounted for by youth
people. - In 1972, juveniles accounted for 19.5 of all
persons charged with Criminal Code offences. - They accounted for 32.2 by 1980.
- In 1989, young people under the age of 18 were
responsible for 22 of all Criminal Code charges.
54- This had decreased to 19 in 1999, and to 17 in
2003. - As we can see, while there have been variations
in the percentages, we see that youth represent a
relatively small percentage of offenders when
compared to adults. - And this number appears to be decreasing in the
last few years.
55A Sociological Perspective on Youth Crime
- A sociological perspective is different from
other perspectives, like a psychological one for
example, because we attempt to place the
individual into a larger context in order to
better understand behavior. - The individuals history, family, school, or
neighborhood become important
56- But this interest leads to further questions
about these factors that also need to be
understood in a context. - The history of the family, the structure of
government, and how that regulates family, or the
culture, economy, polity, and philosophy of
Canadian or western society, and the impact of
all of these factors on family structure and
dynamics.
57- Therefore, sociological questions about crime
including youth crime range from exploring why
individuals behave as they do, by examining the
family, school, or peers, to questions about
crime in a global context. - Questions about crime also include questions
about the meaning of crime, how we talk about it,
and define it, how we respond to it and regulate
it, and how we think about both.
58- What is important from this perspective revolves
around the nature and dynamics of public issues
because their dynamics serve to frame what is
problematic. - The main questions concern why youth crime is a
public issue and how it is problematized.
59Youth Crime as a Public Issue
- Public issues including youth crime are
influenced more by structural, social,
demographic, and political factors than by actual
criminal behavior. - As discussed earlier, children made up a
significant portion of the population in Upper
and Lower Canada.
60- Prior to industrialization, life expectancy was
considerably lower than it is now and as a result
more than 50 of the population was often under
the age of 25. - By the 19th century, these population proportions
began to change and these demographic shifts have
been used to partially explain why the deviant
behavior of children came to be viewed
differently by adults.
61- These demographic shifts stimulated structural
changes such as legislation restricting child
labor and enforced compulsory schooling which
had consequences for the social status of
children. - As children were moved out of factories they
became a sedentary population and a surplus
population.
62- Simply put, they were no longer useful as
laborers and producers. - This resulted in a shift in their social status
and position within their communities and
families from an economic asset to a economic
liability. - They became dependent on adults for their
survival.
63And now?
- Children and youth are subordinate to adult
authority. - They are not permitted such adult rights as
holding decision-making positions, working for a
wage (before a certain age) obtaining credit,
getting married, or engaging in adult pleasures. - This means that young people are not only
dependent but are marginal to adult society and
exist on the periphery.
64- Adults not only control youth through their
dependent and marginalized status, it is the
adult who defines the meaning of youth who they
are, their place in society, and their purpose. - Youth represent, for the adult, the mirror of
society (Rush, 1992) and reflect both what
adults wish for and what they fear.
65- As Rush sums up, increases in youth crime are
indicative of impending social doom (1992,
p.24). - BUT WAIT We have discovered that youth crime
has not necessarily gone up. Why do we insist on
thinking that is has and that youth are more
dangerous now than before?!
66Back to the Role of the Media
- Media play a crucial role in defining youth as a
dangerous class in large part because of the
type and frequency of the coverage they provide
on youth. - We must also consider that people with only a bit
of information about a particular crime are more
fearful and punitive than those with more
information.
67- Therefore the media play a crucial role in
constructing youth crime into a social issue
(Hartnagel Baron, 1995, p.56). - Sensationalist media coverage of youth crime
easily arouses public fear and moral indignation. - Schissel (1997) posits that media reporting does
much more than simply sensationalize.
68- He argues that it presents certain groups like
the poor and marginalized as dangerous people
from whom law-abiding citizens need police
protection. - Criminologists have identified a variety of ways
in which media promote panic, hatred, and fear
about youth. - One of the most important ways this occurs is
through decontexualization.
69- Crimes are always, by the limiting nature of
media (especially newspapers), discussed out of
context. - Context is provided by the journalist, often in a
manner that generates a number of emotions fear,
moral outrage, despair, panic, and hatred. - The message in these stories are also
decontextualized by what is missing.
70- Stories of youth crime seldom presents the views
of youth advocates, rather we hear the voices of
police officers and Crown prosecutors, victims,
and irate individuals. - In this way media discourse is extremely powerful
in promoting the law-and-order agenda and
reinforcing a sense that nothing can be done
about youth crime but to implement more punitive
measures of control.
71Conclusion
- What is clear to us it that how Canadians
perceive, define, and respond to youth crime has
changed over the last century. - At the turn of the 19th century, the public view
of youth crime was of delinquents engaged in
juvenile delinquency. - One hundred years later, the view was of young
offenders engaged in youth crime.
72- Now, at the turn of the 21st century a new frame
is emerging. - The Youth Criminal Justice Act is set to frame
the issue as one of youth criminals engaged in
unlawful activities.
73Discussion questions for chapter one
- Can we answer questions about the severity of
youth crime today compared to the past? - Should the media be prevented from the
reproduction of materials that reinforce and
perpetuate harmful views of marginalized groups
and individuals? - Who has the most realistic view of youth crime
and justice the law and order group or youth
advocates?