A Contribution to Delinquent Behavior in Juveniles
By: Fatih • Essay • 2,016 Words • May 13, 2010 • 1,168 Views
A Contribution to Delinquent Behavior in Juveniles
Parent/Child Relationships:
A Contribution to Delinquent Behavior in Juveniles
Michael Ferra
Sociology 4325, Section 1
Dr. Charles Ubah
March 19, 2008
Parent/Child Relationships:
A Contribution to Delinquent Behavior in Juveniles
For years now researchers in the fields of psychology, sociology, genetics, and the juvenile justice system have contemplated the reasons why some youth turn to delinquency and violence. To investigate the reason, for some adolescents you would have to research on a case to case basis to determine causal factors but the majority of cases could fall into one category or multiple categories stemming why they act the way they do and what causes these reactions. Some researchers may want to reason it’s a cause in the genetic line, it’s the youth’s social atmosphere concerning if the youth has the right friends or any friends at all, or they could even be led to argue it’s the environment in which the child is raised. In any instance, most researchers may first turn to one of the major contributing factors in a youth’s life and this is how the parent contributes to the child from birth until adulthood. There are many different ways in which you can observe a parent and child relationship and determine causal factors of delinquency by observing these questions:
1. Does the child receive maltreatment or abuse from the parent?
2. Does the child live in a single-parent household or in a household where the one or both parents are absent?
3. Does the child receive the right amount of discipline or is the parent too passive?
By observing these three questions and making intensive research on these issues, it can be concluded that parental involvement in a youth’s life is a major contributing factor of why juvenile delinquency exists.
Does the child receive maltreatment or abuse from the parent?
From the time a baby is born until the time it enters adulthood it becomes adjusted to the environment it is surrounded in. The way a baby is raised tends to determine how it will function in social environments. When looking at the patterns of juvenile delinquents and the types of environments they were raised in and accustomed to, it seems to all relate back to abuse and a poor parent to child relationship. Raymond Arthur (2005) has acknowledged this to be the case with his research:
Every study of the personal and social experiences of known juvenile delinquency offenders reveals that almost all of them have endured various kinds of abuse, neglect, deprivation and misfortune. Juvenile offenders are far more likely than the general population to have … experienced child abuse. Neglect by parents, poor maternal and domestic care, family conflict … have all been shown to increase the risk of behavior problems and subsequent offending (p. 237).
The fact that these children grow up in these environments stunts the child’s social being and thus causes the child to react in the manner they have always known. Arthur also suggests that majority of households from which abuse is stemmed is from those of low-income and those of which there is no full-time employment (p.239). Most parents in these households don’t realize the damage they do on their child when they abuse them but just see their reactions as a way to relieve their own stress and discomfort in life. The realization that parents are turning their child into exactly what they are seems to escape from thought. They set themselves up for problems in the long run because these abuse factors are major outputs of juvenile delinquency. In fact, according to studies it has been shown that 26 % of abused youths had official court reports of delinquency compared to 17% of those not abused. In a similar study it was shown that 16% of abused youths had a delinquency record compared to a 7.8% of youths in a non-abusive household (Mann & Reynolds, 2005, p. 156). The rate for those in abused homes is nearly 10% more than those of non-abused households in both studies. Evidence just shows that it puts more of a likely hood a child will misbehave and have delinquent conduct having been raised in an abusive type of environment.
Does the child live in a single-parent household or in a household where the one or both parents are absent?
The absence of a child growing up is another factor that tends to lead to a path