Exploring the pressing issues of juvenile delinquency, victimization, and justice in Chinese societies, this book showcases contemporary research on these critical topics.
Exploring the pressing issues of juvenile delinquency, victimization, and justice in Chinese societies, this book showcases contemporary research on these critical topics.
The collections provide a comprehensive examination of youth-related challenges and justice systems across mainland China, Hong Kong, Macau, and Taiwan. Featuring contributions from top scholars in the field, the book is presented in three thematic sections the nature and correlates of juvenile delinquency, the nature and correlates of juvenile victimization, and juvenile justice in Chinese societies. The chapters, applying a variety of mainstream criminological theories, address both persistent and emerging challenges facing Chinese adolescents, such as drug use, sexual offenses, cyberbullying, and victimization among left-behind children. The book enhances the theoretical and empirical understanding of youth delinquency, victimization, and justice within Chinese societies, while advancing the knowledge base in the field and offering valuable insights for future international and comparative research.
Contributing to the apprehension of both the applicability and limitation of western-based criminological theories in the Chinese context, as well as providing a holistic lens to understand the juvenile justice system in China, this book will be of great interest to students and scholars of Criminology, Criminal Justice, Chinese Studies, Asian Studies, Sociology, Social Work, and Law.
1. Introduction: Past, Present, and Future. Part I. The Nature and
Correlates of Juvenile Delinquency
2. Understanding Juvenile Delinquency in
Chinese Adolescents: A Comparative Study of Risk and Protective Factors for
Juvenile Delinquency in Mainland China, Taiwan, and Macao
3. Explaining
Juvenile Delinquency via Mainstream Criminological Theories: A Systematic
Review of Empirical Studies in Hong Kong
4. Using General Strain Theory to
Explain the Effects of Academic Performance on Students Aggression Behaviors
in Taiwan
5. What Has Changed and What Has Not: The Past Three Decades of
Adolescent Drug Use in Hong Kong. Part II. The Nature and Correlates of
Juvenile Victimization
6. A Sketch of Juvenile Victimization in Mainland
China
7. Bullying Victimization, Perceived Social Support, and Depression
among Chinese Middle School Students
8. Sex Offenses against Minors in China:
An Empirical Examination of Victimization
9. Parental Migration and
Childrens Exposure to Victimization in China. Part III. Juvenile Justice in
Chinese Societies
10. Juvenile Justice in China: A Possible Responsive
Pyramid?
11. Juvenile Justice in Taiwan
Yue Zhuo is a Professor of Criminology and Sociology at St. Johns University, USA. Her research expertise includes crime and law, victimization and fear of crime, juvenile delinquency, substance abuse, and family dynamics.
Hua Zhong is an Associate Professor of the Department of Sociology at The Chinese University of Hong Kong. Her research interests include juvenile delinquency, cybercrime, substance use, and the interplay between social change and crime trends across gender, age, and cultures.