Understanding Offending Behaviour

Regular price €235.60
A01=Cedric Fullwood
A01=David Smith
A01=John Stewart
Assistant Chief Probation Officer
Author_Cedric Fullwood
Author_David Smith
Author_John Stewart
care
Category=JKV
Cedric Fullwood
child
community supervision
Criminal Damage
criminological theory
David Smith
Delinquent Sub-culture
English Probation Service
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Gill Stewart
Girl Friend
Greater Manchester Probation Service
Home Office Inspectorate
Lancaster Studies
Max's Mother
Motoring Offences
NFA
Offending Behaviour
officer
Parental Social Controls
Peer Group Pressure
poverty family unemployment offending
probation
Probation Officer
Probation Service
Professional Offending
recidivism prevention
residential
Residential Child Care
Sf Loan
social exclusion
Social Security Advisory Committee
sociological analysis
Street Homelessness
Subcultural Involvement
Supervising Probation Officer
Tv Licence
Young Man
youth justice system

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138415560
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 02 Oct 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Based on a survey of probation work with almost 1400 young adult offenders, this book provides a unique insight into the realities of probation practice in a context of increasing poverty, drug use and community breakdown. Starting with an outline of the current policy environment, the book discusses the relevance of criminological theory to the harsh experience of young offenders in modern Britain. It goes on to develop a typology of offending behaviour on the basis of detailed and often disturbing accounts of the histories and troubles of young people afflicted by poverty, disruption of family relationships and long term unemployment. While much of the book is concerned with the difficulties young offenders experience, and the problems probation officers have in trying to help them change, the overall message of the book is not one of despair. The authors show that good probation practice can make a difference, and the book is written in a way which will be useful to practitioners and policy-makers involved with supervising offenders in the community. From the typology of offending the authors extract lessons for appropriate and relevant practice which should help to improve the quality and effectiveness of the probation service. Some of these implications are explored in the concluding chapter, by Cedric Fullwood, Chief Probation Officer of Greater Manchester. As well as criminal justice practitioners, students of criminology, probation trainees and other social work students will find in the book many vivid examples of how sociological theory can be used to understand and interpret practice. The book is likely to provoke much debate about what constitutes positive practice in a probation service facing the challenges of the future.
John Stewart, David Smith, Cedric Fullwood