TY - JOUR
T1 - “This is probably the reason why she resorted to that kind of action”
T2 - A qualitative analysis of juvenile justice workers attributions for girls’ offending
AU - Burson, Esther
AU - Godfrey, Erin B.
AU - Singh, Sukhmani
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019, © 2019 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
PY - 2019/4/3
Y1 - 2019/4/3
N2 - A large body of evidence suggests that within the juvenile justice system, girls fare worse than boys on several measures, including number of arrests, length of stay, and mental health outcomes while in the system. Scholarship suggests a myriad of gendered social factors that precipitate girls’ involvement in the juvenile justice system; however, less is known about how stakeholders within the juvenile justice system perceive the girls they work with or interpret their experiences. The current paper examines the attributions that juvenile justice system workers make about the reasons girls offend. In line with previous research, we identify both internal (personality, character traits) and external (situational) explanations for girls’ involvement in the juvenile justice system that correspond to gender stereotypes and expectations of girls. Furthermore, we identify structural attributions as a special subset of external attributions that take into account how larger social, economic, and historical factors shape girls’ situations and experiences and contribute to their criminal behavior. These structural attributions have implications for practitioners’ views of justice and the role of the juvenile justice system in the lives of girls. We conclude with a set of implications for practice and policy.
AB - A large body of evidence suggests that within the juvenile justice system, girls fare worse than boys on several measures, including number of arrests, length of stay, and mental health outcomes while in the system. Scholarship suggests a myriad of gendered social factors that precipitate girls’ involvement in the juvenile justice system; however, less is known about how stakeholders within the juvenile justice system perceive the girls they work with or interpret their experiences. The current paper examines the attributions that juvenile justice system workers make about the reasons girls offend. In line with previous research, we identify both internal (personality, character traits) and external (situational) explanations for girls’ involvement in the juvenile justice system that correspond to gender stereotypes and expectations of girls. Furthermore, we identify structural attributions as a special subset of external attributions that take into account how larger social, economic, and historical factors shape girls’ situations and experiences and contribute to their criminal behavior. These structural attributions have implications for practitioners’ views of justice and the role of the juvenile justice system in the lives of girls. We conclude with a set of implications for practice and policy.
KW - Attributions
KW - blame
KW - gender
KW - juvenile justice workforce
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U2 - 10.1080/10852352.2019.1582142
DO - 10.1080/10852352.2019.1582142
M3 - Article
C2 - 30907265
AN - SCOPUS:85063293472
SN - 1085-2352
VL - 47
SP - 154
EP - 170
JO - Journal of Prevention and Intervention in the Community
JF - Journal of Prevention and Intervention in the Community
IS - 2
ER -