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Young People as Social Capital: Policing and Preventing Crime Among Young People at Risk in Taiwan and England

NCJ Number
237624
Journal
Crime Prevention & Community Safety Volume: 14 Issue: 1 Dated: February 2012 Pages: 16-32
Author(s)
Graham Brooks; Fei-Lin Chen; Chris Lewis; Tom Ellis
Date Published
February 2012
Length
17 pages
Annotation
This article compares the different approach to policing and the prevention of crime among at risk adolescents in Taiwan and England.
Abstract
This article is a comparison of the Taiwanese and English youth justice systems. The Taiwanese system is characterized by the integration of the police and informal social control, with a strong emphasis on voluntary and community involvement and paternalistic discipline; the English system in contrast is on the basis of more centralized control and low local community involvement when dealing with young people. Both approaches however are concerned with 'risk' - those young people posing a risk of offending and those 'at risk' from other young offenders. This article reviews the different youth justice systems and places them into their social, political and cultural contexts. The authors then discuss the different approaches used in dealing with offenders and 'young people at risk' of offending and the sanctions available to the respective youth justice systems. Finally, while accepting cultural differences, the authors conclude that the Taiwanese approach has the welfare of the young person/child as its focus but in a paternalistic way in contrast to England where surveillance, control and formal prevention are regarded as of paramount importance. (Published Abstract)