The quasi-coercive treatment of young drug offenders in South Africa: The role of the family

  • Tara Harris MA Lecturer, Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice, Monash South Africa, South Africa
  • Rika Swanzen PhD Senior Lecturer, Department of Child and Youth Development, Monash South Africa, South Africa
Keywords: Quasi-coercive treatment, youth offenders, drug abuse, criminal justice, person-inenvironment

Abstract

The adoption of restorative justice principles in the treatment of youth offenders offers the opportunity and challenge of providing evidence-based guidelines for treatment programmes (as opposed to punitive measures). This paper aims to add to the body of growing literature to support treatment of youth offenders within the community. A link is made between drug abuse and criminal behaviour in young people and then placed within a legal context that enables the choice of quasi-coercive treatment. To highlight what this means for the family who will take responsibility for alternative sentencing of young offenders, the person-in-environment framework is used to show the dynamic working of environment systems and social roles, as well as attachment theory to show the effect of relationship quality of the parent-child dyad. The paper ends with a summary of aspects to consider when a focus on the family is taken when alternative sentencing is considered.

Published
2014-09-01
How to Cite
Harris, T. and Swanzen, R. (2014) “The quasi-coercive treatment of young drug offenders in South Africa: The role of the family”, Journal of Community Positive Practices, 14(2), pp. 11-27. Available at: https://jppc.ro/index.php/jppc/article/view/235 (Accessed: 21November2024).
Section
Articles