Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on JUVENILE CRIMES AND PROGRAMS. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This paper examines potential reasons why children gravitate toward crime and proposes intervention methods toward deterring at-risk youth from crime. Also included are specfic examples of institutional programs that are geared toward giving at-risk youth and latchkey kids alternatives to empty homes with little or no adult supervision. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_MTjuveni.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
age or younger committing some violent crime that is so heinous, it could cause you to shake your head and wonder how something like that could happen. The question comes
to mind; are we raising a nation of uncaring, immoral children? Although inconceivable to most of us, there are reasons why children turn to crime and delinquencies. Among those reasons
are lack of a caring adult and lack of things to do after school or during summer breaks. Grass-roots organizations and other institutions throughout the United States are attempting to
address this issue by providing programming to at-risk youth. Much of this programming involves after-school programs and summer camps geared specifically to keep children off the streets and to put
them in contact with strong role models and caring mentors. While the concept of President Bill Clintons "midnight basketball" as one deterrent to youth crime was laughed at by conservatives,
there is evidence that keeping children busy and moving around can do a great deal for curtailing the tendencies of children to drift into crime.
No one denies that crimes committed by youths are on the rise. Its the type of story that the media loves - the idea, for example, that
a 17- and 18-year-old can turn a gun on a student population and that an 11-year-old can kill a three-year-old child. Nor is it likely that juvenile crime is going
away any time soon. Its estimated, in fact, that during the next decade or so, the number of juvenile crimes will more than double by 2010, based on 1997 statistics
(Orton, 1999). One major reason for violence among youth, according to criminologist John J. Dilulio Jr., is because of "moral poverty," a situation in which children are placed in life
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