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© British Association of Social Workers

Delinquency and the Family

M. J. POWER, P.M. ASH, E. SHOENBERG and E.C. SIREY

Michael Power trained as a psychiatric social worker. He is now on the staff of the M.R.C. Social Medicine Unit, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, and Co Chairman of Hackney Juvenile Court

Patricia Ash is a social worker who was on the staff of the M.R.C. Social Medicine Unit and is now a Probation Officer in Suffolk

Elizabeth Shoenberg is part-time Psychiatric Consultant to the M.R.C. Social Medicine Unit and a Consultant Psychiatrist at Claybury Hospital

Catherine Sirey was a statistician on the staff of the M.R.C. Social Medicine Unit

Summary

A standardized procedure based upon current social work practice was used to assess the family circumstances of a randomly drawn sample of Tower Hamlets families with son/s between 11 and 14 years of age. These families were compared to those of local boys of the same age before the Courts for a first time. Two-thirds of the officially delinquent boys came from ordinary families, intact and without serious problems. However, compared to the officially non-delinquents in the random sample they were significantly more likely to come from broken homes or unbroken (intact) but with serious and persistent problems. The differences are not due to neighbourhood or school factors that appear to a considerable extent to operate independently of family factors. Few first Court appearances in Tower Hamlets are explained by boys reacting to serious family stress. Follow up over two years of the delinquents showed that just under one-quarter of the boys from ordinary families became persistent offenders. Just over one-third of those from difficult family circumstances reappeared.

These findings are discussed in the light of other research and current social work practice.


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