Causes of juvenile delinquency
Reasons behind juvenile crimes
No one is born with
the potential to be a criminal. Circumstances have shaped them into who they
are. The socio-cultural environment, both within and outside of one’s
household, has a big influence on one’s life and general personality.
The causes of
juvenile crimes, according to Healy and Bronner, are
bad company, adolescent instability and impulses, early sex experience, mental conflicts,
extreme social suggestibility, love of adventure, motion picture, school
dissatisfaction, poor recreation, street life, vocational dissatisfaction,
sudden impulse, and physical conditions of various kinds.
Socio-economic
reasons
1. Broken homes:
According to one
of Uday Shankar’s research in India, 13.3 per cent of the
140 juveniles came from broken households. Death of one or both parents,
chronic sickness or insanity, desertion, or divorce can all break up a family.
Interaction at home is a critical component of a child’s socialisation.
2. Poverty:
A substantial
percentage of delinquent youngsters originate from low-income families. They
perpetuate their crimes as gang members. According to Uday Shankar’s research,
83 per cent of youngsters originate from low-income homes. Poverty forces both
parents to work outside the home for lengthy periods of time in order to earn
their daily bread. There will be no one to look after the children. Such
youngsters may join up with gangsters, either knowingly or unconsciously, and
become criminals.
3. Friends and companions:
As the child grows
older, he/she ventures into the neighbourhood and joins a playgroup or peer
group. He/ she will certainly become a delinquent if he/she joins a group or gang supporting delinquent tendencies. Adolescents also commit crimes as
a result of poor friendships. According to studies, delinquent behaviours are committed in
groups. Shaw examined 6000 youths involved in criminality in his Illinois Crime Survey of 1928.
4. Beggary:
Juvenile misbehaviour
is frequently caused by beggars. Most child beggars originate from
either very impoverished backgrounds or shattered homes. These youngsters are
robbed of their parents’ much-needed love and attention. They realise that the
only way to satisfy their wants and meet their requirements is to engage in
deviant behaviour. As a result, they become delinquents.
Psychological
reasons
1. Mental illness:
According to certain
criminologists, there is a strong link between mental illness and crime.
Some studies have looked at teenage patients and discovered
that they had a variety of mental illnesses. Treatment, not punishment, is
required for a youngster. Psychopathic personality, according to some
mental therapists, is the root of juvenile crime in India. A psychopathic
child is born into a home where love control and affection are completely
absent.
2. Personality traits:
Personality qualities
and a criminal proclivity have also been proven to have a strong link.
Personality is a means for a person to adapt to their circumstances. In this
adaptation, criminal youngsters engage in criminal actions.
3. Individualized emotional issues:
Mental health issues
and emotional maladjustment are significant contributors to juvenile crimes.
Delinquent youngsters may suffer from feelings of inadequacy and
jealousy. “Delinquency is a revolt and an expression of aggressiveness
aimed at damaging, breaking down, or altering the environment,” according
to a psychological perspective. This revolt is mostly motivated
by societal situations that limit an individual’s basic rights and the
fulfilment of their basic necessities. As a result, delinquents are the result
of societal conditions and personal flaws.
Q. Do you know any other causes of juvenile delinquency?
Yes true
ReplyDeleteVery informative
ReplyDeleteThere can be many more reasons behind juvenile crime ,one reason can be easy availability of firearms .
ReplyDeletetrue
DeleteTrue ,👍
ReplyDeleteTreu
ReplyDeleteFriends and companions impact the child more.
ReplyDelete