Volume 40, No. 1
January 1998

Rhétorique de la survictimisation: une étude de cas - le "village gai"
Pierre Tremblay, Éric Boucher, Marc Ouimet, et Louise Biron

Réponse au Professeur Pierre Tremblay
et al. Douglas Buckley-Couvrette, Michael Hendricks, Roger Le Clerc, et Claudine Metcalfe.

Deterrence and homeless male street youths
Stephen W. Baron and Leslie W. Kennedy

Commentary
The "new" justice: Some implications for aboriginal communities
Carol LaPrairie

Research Note
Securing safety on campus: A case study
Jennifer Wood and Clifford Shearing

Book Reviews
JAKUBOWSKI: Immigration and the Legalization of Racism
Julian Roberts

COMBESSIE: Prisons des villes et des campagnes
Marion Vacheret

FAUGERON, CHAUVENET et COMBESSIE: Approches de la prison
Guy Lemire

MORGAN: How to Interview Sexual Abuse Victims - Including the Use of Anatomical Dolls. MYERS: Legal Issues in Child Abuse and Neglect
Dianne Casoni

PERRONE et NANNINI: Violence et abus sexuels dans la famille. Une approche systémique et communicationnelle
Dianne Casoni

Books Received

Coming Events

Memo to Authors

Abstracts/Résumés
Only abstracts of full articles are contained in these Web pages. Research notes and commentaries are usually not summarized into abstracts. Readers who need the complete texts should contact the CCJA and subscribe to the Journal. They can also purchase single copies of back issues that are still in stock.

Rhétorique de la survictimisation: une étude de cas - le "village gai"
Pierre Tremblay, Éric Boucher, Marc Ouimet et Louise Biron
École de criminologie, Université de Montréal, Montréal, Québec

En devenant "visible" et en se territorialisant, on peut penser que la communauté gaie serait en même temps devenue plus exposée et plus vulnérable aux agressions gratuites et prédatrices. Nous analysons dans cette étude les agressions et les vols auxquels sont exposés les homosexuels de sexe masculin en raison de leur orientation sexuelle. Le site de recherche est le "village gai" à Montréal, la période de référence est d'un an (septembre 1995 - septembre 1996) et l'analyse se limite aux délits commis par des délinquants qui ne connaissaient pas antérieurement leurs victimes. Les résultats de cette étude indiquent que l'hypothèse d'une "sous-victimisation" apparaît aussi, sinon plus, vraisemblable que l'hypothèse d'une "sur-victimisation", parce que le village gai fonctionne comme un micro-environnement préventif et dissuasif, parce que la tolérance de l'environnement social à l'endroit des orientations sexuelles individuelles limite au départ le bassin d'agresseurs externes et parce que le bassin de délinquants prédisposés à exploiter les occasions criminelles que procure le village gai est relativement restreint au départ.

Deterrence and homeless male street youths
Stephen W. Baron
University of Windsor , Windsor Ontario
and
Leslie W. Kennedy
University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta

The study explores the effects of the threat of formal punishment on the criminal behaviour of homeless male street youths paying particular attention to how these threats are shaped by their living conditions and other factors in their lifestyles. Results reveal that while many street youths fear legal sanctions, more serious offenders do not. Instead their fear of punishment is reduced by their poverty, drug use, association with criminal peers, and missing normative constraints. The study finds that serious street youth offenders are immersed in a lifestyle where crime, drugs, and criminal peers feed off of one another isolating them from conventional society. The findings suggest that traditional models of deterrence must be reexamined when dealing with extremely "at risk" groups.

 


CJCCJ HOME

Editor
Editorial Board
Submission Instructions

Table of Contents
Sample Article

SUBSCRIBER SERVICES
Subscribe
Renew your subscription


BUSINESS SERVICES
Advertising
Rights & Permissions
Publishing Schedule

Indexing & Abstracting

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

top

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

top


Copyright 1992-2006 University of Toronto Press Incorporated except where otherwise noted. For guidelines on use of material on this site see Legal Notice. Every effort has been made to contact copyright holders of material included in this site. If your article appears here without your permission, please let us know and we will remove it. Contact Anne Marie Corrigan.