Youth Services, Juvenile Justice System
America's Cradle to Prison Pipeline: A Children's Defense Fund Report
America is still a country in which underprivileged children are discriminated against and "pipelined" into a life of problems and failure rather than success and good health. Something must be done; it's the responsibility of all adults to rally together and take action to correct this far-reaching, systematic, cyclic problem. The main steps that must be taken are: work together to change the norms and values of society; replace punishment and incarceration with early intervention and firm commitments to children; begin this commitment with guaranteed prenatal, health, and mental health coverage for everyone; ensure every child eligible for Head Start programs is able to participate; permanently connect every child to a caring parent or mentor; instill a solid academic work ethic and make sure all children can read by the 4th grade; put an end to poverty in America; reduce the numbers of children entering government welfare, juvenile and justice systems; replace guns and violence with nonviolence; put an end to the abuse and neglect of children; put an end to hunger; create jobs with a living wage; make affordable housing available to everyone; and provide quality after-school and summer programs to help keep kids out of trouble.
Critique: This report from the non-profit Children's Defense Fund Organization is a dramatic call to action for adults. Rife with statistics, examples, and biographical sketches, it gives a compelling look into the lives of underprivileged children in America. Placing the blame squarely on adults, it offers many suggestions for working together to change society and improve the outlook for children who are poor, abused, neglected, or victims of discrimination. This report does have some practical positive advice, such as: parents shouldn't strive for perfection, just honesty and being a good role model; adults must stop "talking right and doing wrong" in all areas of their lives; and the problem must be broken down into manageable pieces before it's tackled. On the other hand, the writing is highly judgmental, scolding, biased, emotional, negative, and depressing. This is probably necessary to get the point across and rally supporters, but I'm not sure it's the best strategy for some audience members. I would suggest countering all the negativity with more positive examples of change, and leaving out the references to God altogether. In addition, it's just too broad in scope to be effective. After reading so many pages of harrowing statistics about children and their futures in America, the report begins to sound more like propaganda than an informative piece. And sadly, its expectations are simply not realistic. They are bold and highly worthwhile hopes, of course, but asking to end all child poverty by 2015 is just not feasible. Instead, I think the authors would have produced a much more effective report by taking their own advice and breaking down the monumental task of saving all of America's underprivileged children into reasonable, progressive tasks. By introducing one strategy for improvement per report, and replacing the scolding with concrete, practical steps that everyone can take to help with the effort, I believe they would be much more successful in rallying supporters to actually take action.
Eppright, T., Kashani, J., Robison, B., & Reid, J. (1993). Comorbidity of Conduct Disorder and Personality Disorders in an Incarcerated Juvenile Population. The American Journal of Psychiatry: 150, 8, 1233.
Summary: Children with conduct disorder cost government and society excessive time and money. To date, not many studies have been carried out to determine the rate of different personality disorders among juveniles with conduct disorder. This article describes the results of one such study. In sum, the study found that among all children diagnosed with conduct disorder, antisocial personality disorder was the only frequent coexisting disorder; among girls there is a notable incidence of conduct disorder with borderline personality disorder. Other personality disorders occurring less frequently with conduct disorder include narcissistic, paranoid, passive-aggressive, and dependent. The authors note the significance of finding antisocial personality present in...
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