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Journal Article

Citation

Mooradian JK. J. Soc. Work 2012; 12(1): 37-50.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2012, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/1468017310380087

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Injustice, oppression, and inequality affect human experience in all contexts. This article describes the problem of 'disproportionate minority confinement' in the United States juvenile justice system as one manifestation of such injustice. With specific focus on overrepresentation of African American males, the juvenile justice approach to this problem is contrasted with a critical social work perspective in the form of the human rights approach.

FINDINGS: Available data from all but one of the 50 United States indicate a disproportionate level of incarceration of youth classified as African American in juvenile justice facilities. Although the United States federal government enacted policy reforms in 1988 that require states which receive federal funds to decrease the proportion of minority youth who are incarcerated in secure facilities, few gains have been realized. Application: The author proposes that social workers employ a human rights approach to supplant the dominant juvenile justice paradigm. Application of human rights practice to disproportionate minority confinement suggests that social workers challenge the juvenile justice/social control discourse with a human rights/social change discourse; deconstruct the constructs of 'disproportionate minority confinement', 'juvenile delinquency', and 'race'; challenge the expert/exclusionary problem-solving process with a dialogical/inclusionary process; challenge deficit-oriented activities with strength-based and asset-building activities; and introduce critical reflectivity into professional decision-making.


Language: en

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