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Journal Article

Citation

Pritchard C, Cox M. J. Adolesc. 1998; 21(5): 609-620.

Affiliation

Dept. of Psychiatry, University of Southampton, U.K.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1998, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1006/jado.1998.0182

PMID

9799551

Abstract

An analysis of police records of the criminal "careers" of a complete cohort (1990-95) of 227 "excluded from school" adolescents who had been in "special educational provision" found that 63% had a criminal conviction as young adults (16-23 years). However there was evidence of "missed opportunities" as 26% of the offenders were not convicted until over 18-years-old. Averaging 7.4 offences each, 29% had a conviction for violence, 29% had been to prison and a further 27% are currently on bail for alleged offences. Home Office-based predictions show that 42% are highly likely to re-commit their most serious offence within 2 years. Based upon Audit Commission and Department of Health estimates, these 143 young adults cost a minimum of pound 4.16 million pounds. However, 10% of excluded adolescents who were also "ex child care" had a significantly lower crime rate than the others (41% vs. 70%), which suggests that with targeted support, such as under the 1989 Children Act, effective intervention is possible in a significant number of cases.


Language: en

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