Overview
The course begins by analysing the historical development of both a system of juvenile justice and a system of ideas about juvenile delinquency as distinct entities separable from broader notions of criminality and criminal justice. The development of a juvenile justice system has been paralleled by changing interpretations and explanations … For more content click the Read More button below.
The course will investigate the social relations which mediate between the juvenile justice system and the young people who are brought before it by focussing on gender, race and class. It will also examine the broader political determinants surrounding the operation of the juvenile justice system and moral panics in relation to juvenile offending.
Main Topics
The historical origins and contemporary manifestations of discrete juvenile/youth justice systems will be examinedThe true nature and extent of youth offendingThe multiple competing imperatives that comprise youth justice law, policy and practiceThe module will be underpinned by comparative analyses at local, national and transnational levels
Conditions for Enrolment
Pre-requisite: Academic Program must be 9200 or 9201 or 9285 or 9235.
Exclusion Courses
Course Outline
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Pre-2019 Handbook Editions
Access past handbook editions (2018 and prior)