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Young People, Welfare and Crime

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​Mass youth unemployment is now endemic and almost ubiquitous in the global north and south alike. This book offers an original and challenging interpretation of the ways in which young people’s un...
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  • 30 July 2017
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​Mass youth unemployment is now endemic and almost ubiquitous in the global north and south alike. This book offers an original and challenging interpretation of the ways in which young people’s unemployment and general non-participation is becoming marginalised and criminalised. It re-examines the causes and consequences of non-participation from an unusually wide range of disciplines, using an innovative theorisation of the fast-changing relationships between extended studentship, welfare provision, labour market restructuring and crime. This approach offers an important contribution for understanding what it means for young people to be socially re-positioned and economically excluded in increasingly unequal societies, in and beyond the UK.
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Price: $41.95
Pages: 300
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Imprint: Policy Press
Publication Date: 30 July 2017
ISBN: 9781447307020
Format: Paperback
BISACs: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Criminology, Age groups: adolescents, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Social Work, Social welfare, social policy and social services, Juvenile offenders
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Ross Fergusson is Senior Lecturer in Social Policy at the Open University. He has published widely on young people in leading journals in social policy, politics, youth justice and education, drawing on primary research findings, critical policy analysis and social and political-economic theory.

Part One: The crisis of non-participation;

Crises of non-participation;

Part Two: Work, welfare and crime: research and policy;

Young people and non-participation: discourses, histories, literatures;

Non-participation, wages and welfare;

Non-participation and crime: constructing connections;

Unemployment, crime and recession;

Interlude: Interpretive review;

Part Three Theorising non-participation;

Lines of division, points of entry: two theories;

Theorising the non-participation-crime relationship;

Part Four: Criminalising non-participation;

The advance of criminalisation;

Review and concluding comments.