Criminalizing Children: Welfare and the State in Australia (Cambridge Studies in Law and Society)
Cambridge-Hitachi, 12/21/2017
EAN 9781845656676, ISBN10: 1845656679
Hardcover, 316 pages, 23.5 x 15.6 x 2.1 cm
Language: English
Incarceration of children is rising rapidly throughout of Australia, with indigenous children most at risk of imprisonment. Indigenous and non-indigenous children have been subject to detention in both welfare and justice systems in Australian states and territories since colonization. Countless governments and human rights enquiries have attempted to address the problem of the increasing criminalization of children, with little success. David McCallum traces the history of 'problem children' over several decades, demonstrating that the categories of neglected and offending children are both linked to similar kinds of governing. Institutions and encampments have historically played a significant role in contributing to the social problems of today. This book also takes a theoretical perspective, tracking parallel developments within the human sciences of childhood and theories of race. Applying a social theoretical analysis of these events and the changing rationalities of governing, McCallum challenges our assumptions about how law and governance of children leads to their criminalization and incarceration.
Foreword
criminalizing children. Histories of welfare and the state in Australia
1. Child welfare and the Australian state
an introduction
2. Knowing the 'neglected' aboriginal child
3. Neglected and criminal children
4. Science, race and separations
5. Unstable categories
children in welfare and justice in the early twentieth century
6. The mission station as a correctional institution
7. From mental defectives to the psychology of the family
8. The discovery of the Aboriginal child
9. Government and family.