TY - JOUR PY - 2012// TI - Significant Race Differences in Factors Related to the Detention Recidivism of Youthful Offenders JO - Journal of ethnicity in criminal justice A1 - Mallett, C.A. A1 - Fukushima, M. A1 - Stoddard-Dare, P. A1 - Quinn, L.M. SP - 24 EP - 40 VL - 10 IS - 1 N2 - A significant number of youthful offenders in the United States are held in juvenile court detention centers. Of broad concern is the disproportionate impact these placements have on minority youth, with African American and Hispanic youth much more frequently detained in these facilities compared to Caucasian youth. This U.S. study of a 2-county youthful offender population in the Midwest (1 urban, 1 rural) investigated racial differences in both extralegal (demographic, educational, mental health, and history of abuse or neglect) and court-related legal variables that predict detention placement upon recidivism-in other words, a second detention placement.

FINDINGS from logistic regression analysis indicated that only a few legal factors (violation of a court order, number of court offenses) predicted for both minority and Caucasian youth, but numerous racially disparate extralegal factors also predicted detention placement upon recidivism. Specifically, unique predictors for minority youth included a history of abuse or neglect, suicide attempt, and mental health diagnoses. These findings support the racially differential treatment explanation for detention placements as well as offer interventive opportunities for juvenile court personnel to reduce disproportionate minority confinement among youthful offenders. © 2012 Copyright Taylor and Francis Group, LLC.

Language: en

LA - en SN - 1537-7938 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15377938.2012.642727 ID - ref1 ER -