Реферат: Super Predators Essay Research Paper What is
poverty, and almost ten times more likely to commit violent crime and ending up
in prison. The Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank, reported that the
rise in violent crime over the past 30 years runs directly parallel to the rise
in fatherless families. In the United States, according to the Heritage
Foundation, the rate for juvenile crime is closely linked to the percentage of
children raised in single-parent families. While it has long been thought that
poverty is the primary cause of crime, the facts simply do not support this
view. Juvenile criminal behaviour has its roots in habitual deprivation of
parental love and affection going back to early infancy. A father’s attention to
his son has enormous positive effects on the child’s emotional and social
development. A young boy abandoned by his father is deprived of a deep sense of
personal security. In a well-functioning family the presence of the father
embodies authority and paternal authority is critical to the prevention of
psychopathology and delinquency. In addition to the problem of single parent
homes, is the problem of the children whose behavioural problems are linked to
their mothers’ drug use during pregnancy. Children reaching their teenage years
could result in a potentially aggressive population. Drug use has more than
doubled among 12 to 17year olds since 1991. "The overwhelming common factor
that can be isolated in determining whether young people will be criminal in
their behaviour is moral poverty". (Worsham, James-Blakely, and Stephen,
1997, p 24) According to the recently published "Body Count: Moral Poverty
. . . and How to Win America’ s War Against Crime and Drugs," a new
generation of "super-predators, " untouched by any moral inclinations,
will hit America’s streets in the next decade. John DiIulio, the Brookings
Institute fellow who co-wrote the book with William Bennett and John Walters,
calls it a "multivariate phenomenon, " meaning that child abuse, the
high number of available high-tech guns, alcoholism and many other factors feed
the problem. University of Pennsylvania professor Mavin Wolfgang says, "6
percent to 7 percent of the boys in an age group will be chronic offenders,