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Community-Driven Youth Justice and the Organizational Consequences of Coercive Governance

NCJ Number
244954
Journal
British Journal of Criminology Volume: 53 Issue: 2 Dated: March 2013 Pages: 215-233
Author(s)
Randolph R. Myers; Tim Goddard
Date Published
March 2013
Length
19 pages
Annotation
This article offers a descriptive analysis of the youth crime prevention and intervention strategies of three community-based organizations in the western United States.
Abstract
This article offers a descriptive analysis of the youth crime prevention and intervention strategies of three community-based organizations in the western United States. The article first identifies shared philosophies and practices of organizations that orient to crime as a product of social injustice. It then casts light on the broader issues of cultural resonance and specific governmental hindrances faced by organizations, including how the tracking of performance measures and market-based funding schemes impact the actual operation of community approaches. Through this analysis, the article sketches some of the key elements needed for constructing a theoretical framework to explain how neo-liberal forces may lead to the proliferation or demise of organizations working to create a progressive alternative to United States-style youth justice. (Published Abstract)