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The Declining Significance of Delinquent Labels in Disadvantaged Urban Communities

NCJ Number
311127
Journal
Sociological Forum Volume: 23 Issue: 3 Dated: September 2008 Pages: 575-601
Date Published
July 2008
Abstract

Labeling theory posits that formal sanctions contribute negative defining information to a youth’s reputation and that novice delinquents internalize these negative appraisals. Reflected appraisals and social rejection, in turn, reinforce delinquency. In the context of severely disadvantaged inner-city communities—where arrests have become a normal and expected ritual of male adolescence, and official labelers and labels have less legitimacy—the alleged preconditions for a “labeling” effect of an arrest are generally not met. Retrospective, personal interviews with 20 minority youth (aged 18–20) from high-poverty urban neighborhoods, who experienced at least one juvenile arrest, suggest that juvenile arrests typically carry little stigma and do little discernible harm to self-concept or social relationships. Micro-level labeling theory is an inadequate framework to understand the social impact of mass criminal justice intervention in inner-city communities. Whereas the individual social psychological impact of the official labeling process has weakened, the mass criminalization of inner-city African-American youth has exacted collective costs in terms of social exclusion and diminished social expectations.

(Publisher abstract provided.)

Date Published: July 1, 2008