Legacies of Crime: A Follow-Up of the Children of Highly Delinquent Girls and Boys

Author:   Peggy C. Giordano (Bowling Green State University, Ohio)
Publisher:   Cambridge University Press
ISBN:  

9780511810046


Publication Date:   05 June 2012
Format:   Undefined
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Legacies of Crime: A Follow-Up of the Children of Highly Delinquent Girls and Boys


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Author:   Peggy C. Giordano (Bowling Green State University, Ohio)
Publisher:   Cambridge University Press
Imprint:   Cambridge University Press (Virtual Publishing)
ISBN:  

9780511810046


ISBN 10:   0511810040
Publication Date:   05 June 2012
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  College/higher education ,  Professional & Vocational ,  Tertiary & Higher Education
Format:   Undefined
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Legacies of Crime is destined to become a classic life course study. Focusing on serious offenders in the current social and economic context, Giordano gives us an explicit and disturbing look at why so few offenders desist from crime and why so few of their children can be considered resilient. In graphic detail, the children's accounts of their lives, and of their parents' criminality, focuses our attention on the multiple ways they process and learn from their parents' behavior and how, in turn, they struggle to shape their own identities. Both scholars and policymakers have much to learn from this masterful study. - Candace Kruttschnitt, University of Toronto Giordano presents a masterful look at how the costs of crime are transmitted across generations. Decades of careful and systematic longitudinal research are synthesized with hours of in-depth qualitative interviews to address the issue of why crime is so often clustered within families. By weaving together the narratives of young people who have grown up with justice-involved parents, Giordano opens up a window into the lives of some of the nation's most vulnerable children and adolescents. It is through the voices of these children that we begin to understand the mechanisms that sustain and encourage a criminal lifestyle across generations. This book will be of great interest to anyone who is invested in promoting the healthy development of at-risk children; their stories and messages are difficult to hear, but impossible to ignore. - Candice L. Odgers, University of California, Irvine This is an impressive book - a qualitative and quantitative gem - that provides a longer 'life course' lens than most prior research on the intergenerational transmission of crime or delinquency and other risky behaviors. Criminologists, family and gender scholars, and social scientists will be reading and talking about Legacies of Crime for a long time. - Darrell Steffensmeier, Professor of Sociology and Criminology, Penn State University This is an excellent study of how intergenerational transmission of crime or delinquency, as well as other risky behaviors, evolves and persists.... Highly recommended. - Choice


Legacies of Crime is destined to become a classic life course study. Focusing on serious offenders in the current social and economic context, Giordano gives us an explicit and disturbing look at why so few offenders desist from crime and why so few of their children can be considered resilient. In graphic detail, the children's accounts of their lives, and of their parents' criminality, focuses our attention on the multiple ways they process and learn from their parents' behavior and how, in turn, they struggle to shape their own identities. Both scholars and policymakers have much to learn from this masterful study. - Candace Kruttschnitt, University of Toronto Giordano presents a masterful look at how the costs of crime are transmitted across generations. Decades of careful and systematic longitudinal research are synthesized with hours of in-depth qualitative interviews to address the issue of why crime is so often clustered within families. By weaving together the narratives of young people who have grown up with justice-involved parents, Giordano opens up a window into the lives of some of the nation's most vulnerable children and adolescents. It is through the voices of these children that we begin to understand the mechanisms that sustain and encourage a criminal lifestyle across generations. This book will be of great interest to anyone who is invested in promoting the healthy development of at-risk children; their stories and messages are difficult to hear, but impossible to ignore. - Candice L. Odgers, University of California, Irvine This is an impressive book - a qualitative and quantitative gem - that provides a longer 'life course' lens than most prior research on the intergenerational transmission of crime or delinquency and other risky behaviors. Criminologists, family and gender scholars, and social scientists will be reading and talking about Legacies of Crime for a long time. - Darrell Steffensmeier, Professor of Sociology and Criminology, Penn State University This is an excellent study of how intergenerational transmission of crime or delinquency, as well as other risky behaviors, evolves and persists... Highly recommended. - Choice


"“Legacies of Crime is destined to become a classic life course study. Focusing on serious offenders in the current social and economic context, Giordano gives us an explicit and disturbing look at why so few offenders desist from crime and why so few of their children can be considered resilient. In graphic detail, the children’s accounts of their lives, and of their parents’ criminality, focuses our attention on the multiple ways they process and learn from their parents’ behavior and how, in turn, they struggle to shape their own identities. Both scholars and policymakers have much to learn from this masterful study.” – Candace Kruttschnitt, University of Toronto “Giordano presents a masterful look at how the costs of crime are transmitted across generations. Decades of careful and systematic longitudinal research are synthesized with hours of in-depth qualitative interviews to address the issue of why crime is so often clustered within families. By weaving together the narratives of young people who have grown up with justice-involved parents, Giordano opens up a window into the lives of some of the nation’s most vulnerable children and adolescents. It is through the voices of these children that we begin to understand the mechanisms that sustain and encourage a criminal lifestyle across generations. This book will be of great interest to anyone who is invested in promoting the healthy development of at-risk children; their stories and messages are difficult to hear, but impossible to ignore.” – Candice L. Odgers, University of California, Irvine “This is an impressive book – a qualitative and quantitative gem – that provides a longer ‘life course’ lens than most prior research on the intergenerational transmission of crime or delinquency and other risky behaviors. Criminologists, family and gender scholars, and social scientists will be reading and talking about Legacies of Crime for a long time.” – Darrell Steffensmeier, Professor of Sociology and Criminology, Penn State University ""This is an excellent study of how intergenerational transmission of crime or delinquency, as well as other risky behaviors, evolves and persists.... Highly recommended."" - Choice"


Author Information

Peggy C. Giordano is Distinguished Research Professor at Bowling Green State University. Her research - published in leading journals such as Criminology, the American Sociological Review, and the American Journal of Sociology - has long focused on the causes of juvenile delinquency, and particularly on similarities and differences in male and female pathways to criminal involvement. Her analyses of the adult lives of a sample of delinquent youth have twice won the American Sociological Association's James F. Short, Jr, award for best article, and this volume extends this research in a unique exploration of the lives of the children of the original study subjects.

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