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Journal ArticleDOI

The Child Savers: The Invention of Delinquency.

Ronald L. Akers, +1 more
- 01 Aug 1970 - 
- Vol. 35, Iss: 4, pp 807
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TLDR
The 40th anniversary edition of The Child Savers as discussed by the authors was published by the University of California, San Diego, USA, with an introductory essay by Miroslava Chavez-Garcia, critically examining how Platt's influential study has impacted many of the central arguments social scientists and historians face today.
Abstract
\"The Child Savers deeply influenced me and dozens of other feminist scholars who have studied social policy critically. This reissue is remarkable in allowing us to rethink it, and nowhere more valuable than in Tony Platt's own thoughtful reconsideration.\"- Linda Gordon, professor of history, New York University \"The Child Savers, at forty, is a classic. Accompanied by lively contributions that reflect on its impact and outline recent research, this new edition will ensure that the book lives on, its message always challenging, its relevance undiminished.\"- Hugh Cunningham, emeritus professor of social history, University of Kent \"The Child Savers is a classic, and the updated edition is even more relevant today; a must for the informed public and the perceptive student.\"- Jock Young, Distinguished Professor of Criminal Justice, Graduate Center, City University of New York and John Jay College \"Platt's brilliant inquiry into the oxymoron of juvenile justice demands again that we upend our ritualized system of punishing, containing, and crushing our defiant young.\" -Bernardine Dohrn, Northwestern University School of Law Hailed as a definitive analytical and historical study of the juvenile justice system, this 40th anniversary edition of The Child Savers features a new essay by Anthony M. Platt that highlights recent directions in the field, as well as a critique of his original text. This expanded edition includes insightful commentaries from cross-disciplinary academics, along with an introductory essay by Miroslava Chavez-Garcia, critically examining how Platt's influential study has impacted many of the central arguments social scientists and historians face today. Anthony M. Platt is a professor emeritus at California State University, Sacramento. He is the author of several books on American history, social policy, and race relations. A volume in the Critical Issues in Crime and Society series, edited by Raymond J. Michalowski

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The Privatization Of Punishment: Justification, Expectations, And Experience

TL;DR: In this article, a number of arguments have been advanced to justify the transfer of correctional responsibilities from the public to the private sector, and the analysis suggests the existence of a considerable lack of fit between expected and actual policies and practices adopted in the process of privatization.
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Attitudes of Louisiana practitioners toward rehabilitation of juvenile offenders

TL;DR: In this article, a survey of 3,947 lawyers, judges, probation officers, social workers, and volunteer coordinators in the state of Louisiana found that they do not abandoned the concept of rehabilitation for juvenile offenders but do support punishment as a viable option when treating offenders.
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‘Boys’ clubs are better than policemen's clubs': endeavours by philanthropists, social reformers, and others to prevent juvenile crime, the late 1800s to 1917

TL;DR: Forbush, Forbush, sociologist Charles Zueblin, philanthropist Louise de Koven Bowen and scores of other men and women also believed that structured playground activities and after-school recreation programs were important interventions.
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"Gang" as Empty Signifier in Contemporary Canadian Newspapers

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the meaning of the word gang in the top-selling English-language newspapers in Canada, taking almost 3,900 occurrences of the term and its variants (gang, ganging, and ganged ) in the Globe and Mail, the Toronto Star, the Vancouver Sun, and Montreal Gazette, and analyzed how journalists deploy the concept of gang to describe diverse subjects from vandalism by teenagers to extortion by organized crime syndicates to terrorist plots by religious extremists as well as simply groups of friends or acquaintances with no criminal connections.
Journal ArticleDOI

Trouble-Makers and Interactionism: Reconsidering Quarrels in Institutions for Juvenile Delinquents

TL;DR: This paper argued that the tense relationship between "troublesome youth" and conventional society does not end with incarceration or institutional treatment, rather, it is transformed into an abundance of interpersonal conflicts within incarceration and treatment.