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			 IntroductionIt is an eternal question: are criminals born or made? Foregoing all 
academic research and analysis, it is submitted the answer is both. A 
paedophile or rapist may cite childhood sexual abuse in an attempt to 
explain or at least contextualise his or her own behaviour, whereas a 
thief may point to unavoidable contemporary socio-environmental 
circumstances in an attempt to justify his actions. The pertinent issue
 is that of degree. Childhood offers a context and template for the 
development of children. All those reading will be able to cite numerous
 early experiences of life that, for one reason or another, we call 
formative. We all know it. Certain unique childhood experiences and 
episodes have served to shape in small ways and profound, all our lives. At first blush therefore, and reserving consideration to no more than
 a little personal introspection, it seems inevitable that childhood 
experiences have the ability to influence adult criminality. Given the 
unarguably profound effect that childhood experiences exercise in the 
formation of an adult's general attitudes to life it seems manifest that
 such influence is likely to material and pervasive.
 Juvenile Criminality It can be contested that juvenile crime is motivated by factors such 
as material gain, peer prestige, self-esteem, and excitement. These 
factors all have fundamental social dimensions and are brokered by 
compelling social variables. In theory, it is almost always feasible 
for parents living in deprived areas and areas of high background 
criminality, to protect their children from the surrounding culture. 
However, in practice it is extremely difficult for them to do so. Most 
children that grow up in a difficult area will be subjected to and 
possibly influenced by the socio-economic context of the wider community
 and in particular the prevailing local youth culture.  In many deprived communities, the dominant youth culture maintains a 
perception that drug abuse offers a thrilling an appealing lifestyle, 
presenting the opportunity to escape temporarily from an otherwise 
depressing and gloomy environment. Moreover there is money to be made 
from drugs. In a child's sponge-like and malleable mind the notion that 
the easy, or ostensibly easy material rewards that go hand in hand with 
the trade in drugs - especially when all around poverty is the benchmark
 - may serve to help form strong perceptions and a raft of negative 
norms from an early age. Membership of and acceptance within a tight 
knit self-perpetuating and affirming Anti-community is another cogent 
and circular factor. It is undeniable that poverty and other deleterious conditions of 
deprivation may put families and family structures under substantial 
stress which can impair parental ability and capacity to maintain the 
type of nurturing environment that encourages socially positive 
behaviour and the formation of decent moral perspectives and frameworks.
 That said however, even advantaged children who have been effectively 
and laudably socialised within the family setting are susceptible to 
being influenced and persuaded by peer-groups and the pervasive 
subculture in which they are immersed. In particular this may cause a 
problem if the subculture in question involves the abuse of drugs from 
the harder end of the spectrum.  It is a trite observation that opiate drugs prove themselves highly 
alluring to young people from disadvantaged backgrounds. Arguably this 
is due to the experience of conditions of deprivation and of the 
expectation of inferior and negative social roles. This tends to produce
 dissatisfaction, a poor self-image, and in serious cases anger and 
psychologically it undoubtedly prepares the way for both criminal 
activity and drug addiction. Again of course, it is an obvious point 
that drug use, once a pattern or addictive habit is established, 
cultivates its own demanding and often criminal influences, if not 
behavioural imperatives, on the addicted.  Also of prime importance are individual and family factors. These 
might include: a predisposition towards aggression and confrontation; an
 impulsive or compulsive temperament; a tendency to be easily led; low 
intelligence; inappropriate parental discipline methods; limited 
parental contact and socialisation; the indoctrination of anti-community
 attitudes and actions by criminal parents or siblings. Such factors 
can greatly increase the tendency to display what may initially be 
trivial but often persistent delinquency which can mature, especially 
when added to the frothy mix of testosterone so abundant in adolescence,
 to become serious criminal behaviour in adulthood. Again we can isolate
 the conclusion that drug addictions at all levels of social class but 
in particular in the lower castes, manifestly entail a significant 
influence in provoking serious and sustained criminal activity entirely 
independently of other individual and interpersonal risk factors for 
criminality.  Children that grow up in what can be described as marginal or 
marginalised social contexts and communities may see themselves as 
unfairly excluded from life. This may be the seed of childhood criminal
 activity and in this sense crime is often likely to be instigated by a 
clear rejection of the normative moral codes of law abiding society by 
the child's immediate peer group. Such received values may be replaced 
by a different code that fosters certain types of criminal thought, 
preparatory behaviour and activity. It is submitted that criminal 
activity is far less likely to be engendered by some structural failure 
of socialisation or in a 'criminal personality' - although both of these
 factors may occasionally arise.
 Case Study: IrelandIn simple terms, a disadvantaged background or deprived childhood may
 operate in multifarious and highly complex ways to inculcate juvenile 
criminality or criminal tendencies which may germinate into serious 
criminal behaviour in later life. In Ireland, for example, over the 
last thirty years, social deprivation in a marginalised, splintered and 
disadvantaged community has been identified as the seed corn for crops 
of adult criminals. Given its history, Ireland is an excellent social 
example to draw upon due to the severe difficulties faced by the last 
few generations by both the poorest and better off sectors of the 
community. The evidence indicates that criminality has been neatly 
concentrated in local areas of high social deprivation. Although now a 
thriving and successful society is emerging, in the past Ireland has 
suffered relatively high levels of childhood poverty and religious and 
social factors did conspire to put a statistically high proportion of 
children into poorer situations. Ireland has suffered extreme 
polarisation, certainly relative to the average Western society, in 
regards to wealth distribution. Studies have indicated that in the 
developed world of the latter half of the twentieth century, only in the
 United States was there a greater divide between the richest and 
poorest members of society. This in turn fed into extremes of criminal 
behaviour in both national communities. It is interesting to note that 
has shown that the fiscal priorities of the Irish Government, up to and 
including 1997, did not properly reflect or address social inequity. 
This can only have exacerbated criminal activity among adults as 
disadvantaged children reached their majority with a skewed attitude and
 sense of morality.  In more recent times the agenda of the Irish state has been to 
prioritise issues connected with social welfare and in particular, both 
directly and indirectly, child welfare. It is too early to ascertain 
whether these changes will lead to a reduction in the frequency or 
gravity of adult criminality, but already reductions in juvenile 
delinquency have been identified. Inevitably, it is submitted, 
reductions in childhood criminality must derive a reduction in the adult
 crime.
 Maturing out of CrimeIt is well-established in criminological studies that the majority of
 juvenile offenders eventually grow out of deviant and criminal 
behaviour. The exact process by which this occurs is difficult to 
isolate but the results are observable throughout society.   'The good news is that most juvenile delinquents are leading quite 
successful lives by the age of 32.'  Albeit generally acknowledged, desistance from crime is not readily 
understood. For most typical individuals, participation in trivial 
criminality commences with the onset of adolescence at around age 
eleven, reaches a peak in late adolescence aged around sixteen, and has 
concluded before the person attains 35 years of age. This behavioural 
curve is clearly apparent in numerous cross-confirming studies employing
 an eclectic range of methodologies - indeed, it has been suggested 
that the situation has been the same for centuries. It is perhaps 
merely a so-called law of nature or rite of passage - a human experience
 as normal and natural as a toddler's temper tantrums or a teenage 
girl's… temper tantrums.It can therefore be observed that an individual's experiences in 
childhood might well influence a future criminal career. However, 
juvenile criminal activity per se is no guarantee that an adult will 
adopt serious or sustained criminality in later life. Most people seem 
to experience what has been described as spontaneous remission as they 
mature. |