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We're going to keep trying to strengthen the American family. To make them more like the Waltons and less like the Simpsons. George Bush (Snr) (1992). Family, Young People and Crime: Locations, Causes and Solutions. Philip Larkin - This Be The Verse They f*** you up, your mum and dad.
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We're going to keep trying to strengthen the American family. To make them more like the Waltons and less like the Simpsons. George Bush (Snr) (1992) Family, Young People and Crime:Locations, Causes and Solutions • Philip Larkin - This Be The Verse • They f*** you up, your mum and dad. • They may not mean to, but they do. • They fill you with the faults they had • And add some extra, just for you. • But they were f***ed up in their turn • By fools in old-style hats and coats, • Who half the time were soppy-stern • And half at one another's throats. • Man hands on misery to man. • It deepens like a coastal shelf. • Get out as early as you can, • And don't have any kids yourself. Troubles of Youth 11th Feb 2008
Lecture Outline • The Family: patterns, problems, ideologies and theories • The Family • as the cause of crime • as a site of crime • as a solution to crime
Gender Social Class Locality Ethnicity Work / Leisure What is the Family? Sexuality Poverty The Family • The locus of the range of sociological influences • is the “family” simply a short-hand for society, or is it an influence in its own right?
Theories of the family • Functionalist Theories • nuclear family: functional adaptation to the requirements of industrial society • Socialisation of children • Emotional and physical support for the (male) breadwinner • Marxist Theories • Reproduction of the workforce, on a daily and generational basis • Individual identity lost in the harsh world of work • New family became a ‘real sphere of personal freedom and independence’ (Zaretsky)
Feminist theories of the family • The family is a key institution in maintaining patriarchy • Women’s housework: vital to the economy, but unpaid • Men given control over women’s sexuality and fertility • Reinforces separate gender identities • Key institution socialising gender roles • Separation of public and private spheres
Family life in decline? All marriages First marriages Divorces Remarriages
Average age at first marriage and divorce Source: ONS
Increasing single parenthood Percentage of children brought up in different family types (Source: Social Trends 2007)
Political approaches to the family • Conservative • “The nation’s spiritual leaders should unashamedly extol the virtues of normal family life” • Nuclear families form the bedrock of society • Other forms are deviant, unstable and unworkable • Labour • Largely in agreement, but some recognition of diversity of family types, and the need for policy to respond to social change
Current Crime / Family Ideologies (see Mooney on Wiki) • A central aspect of the “Respect” agenda • the ‘family’ seen as a moral agent • “poor” parenting / family breakdown • ignores the social and economic context that gives rise to these • Solution: strengthen the institution • Relies on a certain social construction of the family
The family as a cause of crime • Familial causes of crime • Genetic explanations • Differential Association • Family as a criminal structure
Dysfunctional families as a cause of crime • “Families without Fatherhood” • George Erdos / Norman Dennis • The lack of an appropriate male role model is resulting in a weakening of moral consensus and a resultant rise in crime • Associated with Individualistic Underclass theories (eg. Charles Murray)
National Survey of Health and Development • Factors associated with delinquency (Wadsworth, 1979) • Parent’s social status • Family size • Child’s birth order • Parent’s split up <5
Ruby and Farrington (2001) • Comparison of delinquency rates between • permanently disrupted families • intact families • Also considered conflict within families • Disrupted families, and intact high conflict families showed similar delinquency rates • Loss of mothers seemed to have a greater influence than loss of fathers • Disrupted families, where child stays with mother show similar patterns to intact families
Family as a site of crime • Hidden crime: the domestic sphere as protecting the offender • Contrasts with the ideology of the family as nurturing, safe ‘haven in a heartless world’ • Separation of public and private spheres has kept violence in the family hidden • Feminist campaigning has brought private sphere into arena of public debate
The family as a solution to crime? • Families placed as central to the maintenance of secure communities • Dysfunctional families seen as a major problem (ignores wider social causes) • Benefits withdrawn from parents • Parenting Orders / fines • Parenting contracts
Family Placement • Support Care – remain predominantly in own family settings • Remand Fostering – for young people refused bail and remanded to local authority care • Intensive Fostering – an alternative to custody; where living circs contributed to offence • Avoids problems associated with custodial settings • Strong links to supportive adults: pro-social approach in the real world • Young people’s agency still prioritised
Parenting Contracts • CDA 1998 / CJA 2003 / Anti-social behaviour Act 2003 • Available if a child has • convicted of a criminal offence • received an ASBO, referral order child safety order • or, parents are convicted of failing to assure school attendance, or YOP • 2003 -> “freestanding parental orders” • Failure to comply: fine up to £1000 and/or community penalty
Parenting Contract • Agreement as to the work/support to be carried out • addressing conflict and challenging behaviour, both of young people and within the family • supervision and monitoring of young people • A range of therapeutic, group work, advisors and mentoring schemes
“Positive Parenting” (on Wiki) • Evaluation of 34 parenting projects • Effectiveness • improved communication, monitoring and supervision • Reduction in Conflict • Parent’s feeling empowered to influence children’s behaviour, and perform “parenting” in general
Criticisms of Parenting Orders • Fails to address structural inequality, and places the blame on the family / parents • Support not available at the first signs of problems – only really targeting young people who have offended • Criminalises parents • assumes parental control: often not the case • parental punishments for their children’s actions • punishes parents, but NOT the State when responsible for young people’s care