TY - JOUR PY - 2004// TI - Privation and Vulnerability to Victimization for Canadian Youth: The Contexts of Gender, Race, and Geography JO - Youth violence and juvenile justice A1 - Eisler, L. A1 - Schissel, Bernard SP - 359 EP - 373 VL - 2 IS - 4 N2 - This study examines the complex nature of the association between poverty and victimization of adolescents. Based on a survey of 2,600 school-aged youth in the province of Saskatchewan, the analysis focuses on the effects of being poor on fear and victimization in school, noncriminal victimization outside of school, and overall criminal victimization. The results illustrate clearly that poverty places youth at psychic and physical risk. Importantly, though, the damaging effects of poverty on youth security are different for male and female youth, for Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal youth, and for youth living in urban, rural, and satellite communities and are dependent on the dayto-day context inside and outside of school. The findings support the necessity for a complex understanding of the relationships among poverty, crime, and victimization that include structural and geographical considerations.
LA - SN - 1541-2040 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1541204004267784 ID - ref1 ER -