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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 7 page paper. There has been a general consensus that there is a higher proportion of juvenile delinquency evident in broken homes. This essay discuses if this premise is correct. The three theoretical perspectives regarding delinquency are reported and discussed. Research with contradicting research is reported. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Page Count:
7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: ME12_PGdvdq9.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
all empirical studies reach that same conclusion. Some suggest the road to delinquency after parental separation or divorce is cloudy. Other variables may play at least as an important a
role in a child becoming involved in delinquent behaviors. The assumption that the dissolution of a family will lead children to choose a life of crime is based on the
fact that the family is the first social system in which children participate and it is the most important social system (San Jose State University, 2009). This important social system
has been in the process of transition for decades. Most agree that there is no longer a tradition extended family and there are more children living in one-parent homes (Department
of Criminal Justice, 2008). That means there are fare fewer adults in the home on any given day. In 1970, about half of the moms worked and in 2008 that
number increased to 75 percent (Department of Criminal Justice, 2008). Further, only 68 percent of all children live in two-parent homes (Department of Criminal Justice, 2008). While there is debate
over the exact influence divorce or fragmented homes plays in delinquency, one factor that is generally agreed upon is that when the family breakup is traumatic, there does appear to
be more delinquency in these families (Department of Criminal Justice, 2008). Children are less likely to graduate from high school (Department of Criminal Justice, 2008). Some authors point out the
fact that the rate of delinquency in a home where the parent has died does not increase (San Jose State University, 2009). This flies in contradiction to the premise that
it s the absent parent that has an impact on delinquency. Some research studies have shown that other factors contribute to delinquency beyond a fragmented family. One study concluded
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