Public Support for Early Intervention Programs: Implications for a Progressive Policy Agenda
- 1 April 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Crime & Delinquency
- Vol. 44 (2) , 187-204
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0011128798044002001
Abstract
Since the early 1970s, criminologists have embraced the view that only broader social justice will reduce crime—a stance that has largely surrendered criminal justice policy to conservatives. Emerging research shows, however, that early intervention programs prevent crime and are cost effective. Based on a 1997 survey of Tennessee respondents, the article reports further that the public supports early intervention strongly and prefers it to incarceration as a strategy to reduce offending. Thus, the article contends that early intervention programs, which extend services to at-risk children and families, comprise an important progressive policy initiative that criminologists and policy makers should support.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Public Support for Correctional Treatment: The Continuing Appeal of the Rehabilitative IdealThe Prison Journal, 1997
- Mail vs. telephone surveys of criminal justice attitudes: A comparative analysisJournal of Quantitative Criminology, 1996
- Help Wanted: Economists, Crime and Public PolicyJournal of Economic Perspectives, 1996
- The Twelfth Jack Tizard Memorial Lecture *Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 1995
- Institutional Perspectives on SociologyAmerican Journal of Sociology, 1995
- Early developmental prevention of juvenile delinquencyCriminal Behaviour and Mental Health, 1994
- The Generality of Deviance: Replication of a Structural Model among High-Risk YouthsJournal of Research in Crime and Delinquency, 1992
- DOES CORRECTIONAL TREATMENT WORK? A CLINICALLY RELEVANT AND PSYCHOLOGICALLY INFORMED META‐ANALYSIS *Criminology, 1990
- Is child saving dead? Attitudes toward juvenile rehabilitation in IllinoisJournal of Criminal Justice, 1983
- Treatment Destruction TechniquesJournal of Research in Crime and Delinquency, 1979