Reciprocal associations between housing instability and youth criminal legal involvement: a scoping review.

IF 2.6 Q1 CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY Health and Justice Pub Date : 2022-04-08 DOI:10.1186/s40352-022-00177-7
Lars Almquist, Sarah Cusworth Walker
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Abstract

Background: Youth experiencing homelessness have disproportionate contact with the criminal legal system. This system contact represents a critical inflection point for enhancing risk or opportunities for stabilization; however, the policy and scholarly traditions examining the criminal legal system have not traditionally incorporated housing or other social determinants as a central focus of intervention.

Methods: We conducted a scoping review using PRISMA-ScR guidelines to examine how the research literature is currently addressing housing within the context of youth involvement in the legal system. Databases searched included PubMed, Web of Science, and Academic Search Complete. Google Scholar was used to identify papers not indexed in the academic databases of interest. Database searches were conducted between September and December 2019 and articles were restricted to those published in English between the year 2000 and 2019. Key study components extracted included demographic information regarding each sample, type of article, study methodology, direction of effects of interest, outcome measures and primary findings, as well as theoretical frameworks engaged by the authors.

Results: The search results returned 2154 titles for review. After screening all 2154 titles, 75 met eligibility for inclusion. Abstract reviews were conducted for all 75 papers. 36 abstracts met eligibility criteria and underwent full-text review. Ultimately, 29 articles satisfied eligibility criteria and were included in this scoping review.

Conclusions: Publications are primarily focused on the social epidemiology of risk factors and behaviors determining youth justice contact, but relatively less so on studies of interventions targeting youth delinquency, crime reduction, or recidivism that included housing support. The lack of continuity in theorizing from epidemiology to applied science in this area represents a gap in the literature that is likely reducing the effectiveness of interventions to interrupt patterns of legal system contact for youth. Integrating a public health framework that emphasizes the upstream social determinants leading to contact with the youth justice system would represent a paradigm shift for the field that would have beneficial effects on long term health outcomes for youth.

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住房不稳定性与青少年刑事法律参与之间的相互关联:范围界定审查。
背景:无家可归的青年与刑事法律制度有不成比例的接触。该系统接触代表了增加稳定风险或机会的关键拐点;然而,审查刑事法律制度的政策和学术传统传统上并没有将住房或其他社会决定因素作为干预的中心焦点。方法:我们使用PRISMA-ScR指南进行了范围审查,以检查研究文献目前如何在青年参与法律体系的背景下解决住房问题。检索的数据库包括PubMed、Web of Science和Academic Search Complete。谷歌Scholar用于识别未在感兴趣的学术数据库中索引的论文。数据库检索于2019年9月至12月进行,文章仅限于2000年至2019年期间以英文发表的文章。提取的关键研究成分包括每个样本的人口统计信息、文章类型、研究方法、感兴趣的影响方向、结果测量和主要发现,以及作者采用的理论框架。结果:搜索结果返回2154个标题供审阅。在对所有2154篇论文进行筛选后,有75篇符合纳入条件。对全部75篇论文进行摘要综述。36篇摘要符合入选标准,并进行了全文审查。最终,有29篇文章符合入选标准,纳入了本次范围审查。结论:出版物主要集中在决定青少年司法接触的风险因素和行为的社会流行病学上,但相对较少涉及针对青少年犯罪、减少犯罪或累犯的干预研究,包括住房支持。从流行病学到应用科学在这一领域的理论缺乏连续性,这代表了文献中的一个空白,这可能会降低干预措施的有效性,以中断青少年与法律系统的接触模式。整合一个强调导致与青年司法系统接触的上游社会决定因素的公共卫生框架,将是该领域的一种范式转变,将对青年的长期健康结果产生有益影响。
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来源期刊
Health and Justice
Health and Justice Social Sciences-Law
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
8.60%
发文量
34
审稿时长
13 weeks
期刊介绍: Health & Justice is open to submissions from public health, criminology and criminal justice, medical science, psychology and clinical sciences, sociology, neuroscience, biology, anthropology and the social sciences, and covers a broad array of research types. It publishes original research, research notes (promising issues that are smaller in scope), commentaries, and translational notes (possible ways of introducing innovations in the justice system). Health & Justice aims to: Present original experimental research on the area of health and well-being of people involved in the adult or juvenile justice system, including people who work in the system; Present meta-analysis or systematic reviews in the area of health and justice for those involved in the justice system; Provide an arena to present new and upcoming scientific issues; Present translational science—the movement of scientific findings into practice including programs, procedures, or strategies; Present implementation science findings to advance the uptake and use of evidence-based practices; and, Present protocols and clinical practice guidelines. As an open access journal, Health & Justice aims for a broad reach, including researchers across many disciplines as well as justice practitioners (e.g. judges, prosecutors, defenders, probation officers, treatment providers, mental health and medical personnel working with justice-involved individuals, etc.). The sections of the journal devoted to translational and implementation sciences are primarily geared to practitioners and justice actors with special attention to the techniques used.
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