Supervision

Distribution by Scientific Domains
Distribution within Medical Sciences

Kinds of Supervision

  • adult supervision
  • bank supervision
  • clinical supervision
  • close supervision
  • community supervision
  • effective supervision
  • group supervision
  • health supervision
  • medical supervision

  • Terms modified by Supervision

  • supervision session

  • Selected Abstracts


    MAKING DELINQUENT FRIENDS: ADULT SUPERVISION AND CHILDREN'S AFFILIATIONS,

    CRIMINOLOGY, Issue 1 2005
    MARK WARR
    Although having delinquent friends is one of the strongest known correlates of delinquent behavior, criminologists have been curiously silent as to why some adolescents acquire delinquent friends and others do not. Analysis of data from the national Survey of Parents and Children reveals a strong association between forms of direct and indirect parental supervision and the kinds of friends that adolescents make. Parents who closely monitor their children's affiliations exhibit a variety of traits typical of involved or conscientious parents. Indirect supervision also appears to mediate the effect of attachment to parents, one of the few established correlates of delinquent friendships. These and other findings illustrate the critical role that parent-child relations play in the process of making delinquent friends. [source]


    ABOUT SUPERVISION: AN INTERVIEW WITH DONALD MELTZER

    BRITISH JOURNAL OF PSYCHOTHERAPY, Issue 3 2005
    Robert
    First page of article [source]


    Desire and the Prosthetics of Supervision: A Case of Maquiladora Flexibility

    CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY, Issue 3 2001
    Melissa W. Wright
    [source]


    Clinical supervision in the alcohol and other drugs field: an imperative or an option?

    DRUG AND ALCOHOL REVIEW, Issue 3 2007
    ANN M. ROCHE
    Abstract There is a growing interest in Clinical Supervision (CS) as a central workforce development (WFD) strategy. This paper provides a definition of and rationale for CS, characterises its various forms, identifies selection and training issues, and advises on policy and implementation issues central to redressing shortcomings in supervision practice within the alcohol and other drugs (AOD) field. Relevant selective literature is reviewed. Key conceptual issues were identified, and strategies developed to address implementation barriers and facilitate relevant policy. There is a common conceptual confusion between administrative supervision and CS. Clarification of the role, function and implementation of CS is required. Priority issues for the AOD field include: enhancing belief in CS; ensuring adequate resource allocation; developing evaluation protocols; and addressing specific arrangements under which supervision should occur. CS has been underutilised to date but holds considerable potential as a WFD strategy. It is fundamental to workers' professional development, can contribute to worker satisfaction and retention, and may improve client outcomes. Critical next steps are to establish the generalisability to the AOD field of the benefits observed from CS in other disciplines, and evaluate longer-term gains of CS programs. [source]


    The New Basel Capital Adequacy Framework

    ECONOMIC NOTES, Issue 3 2001
    Giovanni Carosio
    The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision is about to publish a second consultative paper on the reform of the 1988 Accord on capital adequacy. The new document takes into account the comments received on the June 1999 consultative paper, gives a much clearer picture of crucial aspects of the reform that were only presented in very general terms in the earlier paper, and quantifies most of the parameters that will be needed to calculate the capital requirements. Although considerable progress has been made towards reaching operational status, several aspects of the regulation still need to be worked out and further reflection is needed on the best way to tackle some of the more problematic issues that have been identified. Comments, suggestions, criticisms such as today's seminar will certainly provide, are therefore most welcome. There will be time to take them into consideration, as the final draft of the regulation will not be completed before the end of 2001. My presentation is divided into three parts: I first illustrate the objectives of the reform, then describe the essential features of the new regulation, and finally discuss the possible impacts of its implementation. (J.E.L. G21, G28). [source]


    Implementation of Basel II

    FINANCIAL MARKETS, INSTITUTIONS & INSTRUMENTS, Issue 5 2005
    by Jaime Caruana
    In this article Jaime Caruana, Governor of the Bank of Spain and Chairman of the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, first discusses the current status of the Basel II Accord. Next, he offers his perspective on macroeconomic issues related to the capital framework, focusing especially on pro-cyclicality. Finally, he discusses three important Basel II implementation issues, namely calibration, validation, and cross-border supervision. [source]


    Supervision and training in child care: Does reflective supervision foster caregiver insightfulness?,

    INFANT MENTAL HEALTH JOURNAL, Issue 1 2010
    Elita Amini Virmani
    The goal of this study was to explore the effects of reflective and traditional supervision and training on caregiver insightfulness. Caregiver insightfulness, or caregiver ability to understand "motives underlying the child's behavior in a complete, open, and accepting way" (D. Oppenheim, D. Goldsmith, & N. Koren-Karie, 2004, p. 352) was assessed at two time points with 21 new caregivers at two university-based childcare sites. Trends suggest that caregiver insightfulness was relatively stable while increased levels of components of caregiver insightfulness over a period of approximately 2.5 months were positively associated with reflective supervision and training. These findings suggest that encouraging caregivers to reflect on their interactions with the children in their care fosters caregivers' ability to see from the child's perspective in an open and accepting way. [source]


    Public health nurses' supervision of clients in Norway

    INTERNATIONAL NURSING REVIEW, Issue 3 2005
    S. Tveiten rn
    Aim:, The aim of this study was to explore and describe what public health nurses (PHNs) understand by client supervision and how they perform it. Background:, The main principles of the health promotion discourse initiated by the World Health Organization (WHO) over the last 20,30 years are client participation and the view of the client as expert. Supervision is one relevant intervention strategy in the empowerment process, in which these principles play a central role. There is a lack of research pertaining to the intervention models employed by PHNs. Methods:, Twenty-three transcribed audiotaped dialogues between PHNs and their clients were analysed by means of qualitative content analysis. Findings:, What the PHNs understand by supervision and how they perform it can be described by three themes: continuity in relationships and reflexivity in the supervision approach, communicating with the client about his/her needs, problems and worries; and the organization of client supervision. Conclusions:, The PHNs in this study understand client supervision as communication and relationships with clients on the subject of a healthy lifestyle, child development and coping with everyday life. The PHNs' approach to client supervision seemed to include aspects of empowerment by means of client participation and the view of the client as expert. However, the PHNs themselves had an expert role. [source]


    Assessment, Supervision and Support in Clinical Practice.

    JOURNAL OF ADVANCED NURSING, Issue 6 2003
    A Guide for Nurses, Midwives, other Health Professionals
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Review of Swedish regulation and monitoring of aquaculture

    JOURNAL OF APPLIED ICHTHYOLOGY, Issue 4-5 2000
    H. Ackefors
    Summary The aquaculture industry is governed by national Acts, ordinances and regulations. Provisions for the industry have been slightly modified since Sweden entered the EU in 1995. Swedish environmental legislation is applied when potential farmers ask for permission to cultivate. The Acts regulate farming sites, the discharge of water from farms and the species and strains that are permitted to be cultivated. The application procedure for fish farming is comprehensive and judged with regard to the Swedish Acts. Supervision of the aquaculture industry is performed by the County Administrative Board and sometimes also by the Local Administration. All farming units producing stocking material are strictly controlled in an elaborate scheme. Sweden has adopted European Community (EC) directives for shellfish, fish and water quality. Criteria for classifying water quality for concentrations of organic compounds and metals in blue mussels are worked out, and toxins in blue mussels are monitored. EC directives for fresh water quality which aim to sustain fish stocks are adopted as Swedish conditions. [source]


    Supervising medication administration by undergraduate nursing students: influencing factors

    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NURSING, Issue 5-6 2010
    Kerry Reid-Searl
    Background., The administration of medication is an important skill nursing students need to learn in the clinical setting to develop safe practices. Legally within Queensland, registered nurses are required to provide personal supervision for this process. Research undertaken by the authors suggests the supervision students receive frequently falls short of what is legally required. Aims and objectives., The aim of the study was to examine the factors that influence the experiences of final-year undergraduate nursing students when administering medications in the clinical setting. Design., A grounded theory approach was used with constant comparative analysis to identify categories from the data. Methods., The experiences of final-year nursing students were explored using a grounded theory approach. In-depth, semi-structured interviews were conducted with 28 final-year undergraduate nursing students in Queensland, Australia. Results., Supervision was found to be the central issue influencing medication administration for students. Three main factors were identified as influencing the supervision provided by registered nurses: attitudes of the registered nurse, communication from the university, and busyness and having time. Conclusions., The extent to which registered nurses provide direct supervision to nursing students when administering medication is influenced by factors inherent within the clinical environment. Relevance to clinical practice., The factors influencing the supervision provided by registered nurses needs further exploration that effective strategies can be implemented to ensure safe practices in relation to medication administration can be implemented. [source]


    A Qualitative Study of Intimate Partner Violence Universal Screening by Family Therapy Interns: Implications for Practice, Research, Training, and Supervision

    JOURNAL OF MARITAL AND FAMILY THERAPY, Issue 1 2008
    Jeffrey L. Todahl
    Although a few family therapy researchers and clinicians have urged universal screening for intimate partner violence (IPV), how screening is implemented,and, in particular, client and therapist response to screening,is vaguely defined and largely untested. This qualitative study examined the dilemmas experienced by couples and family therapy interns when implementing universal screening for IPV in an outpatient clinic setting. Twenty-two graduate students in a COAMFTE-accredited program were interviewed using qualitative research methods grounded in phenomenology. Three domains, 7 main themes, and 26 subthemes were identified. The three domains that emerged in this study include (a) therapist practice of universal screening, (b) client response to universal screening, and (c) therapist response to universal screening. Implications for practice, research, training, and supervision are discussed. [source]


    Multiprofessional clinical supervision: challenges for mental health nurses

    JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRIC & MENTAL HEALTH NURSING, Issue 3 2001
    K. Mullarkey ma bsc(hons) rn cpncert rnt
    Recent reform and developments in mental health care provision have increasingly espoused the value of multiprofessional teamwork in order to ensure that clients are offered co-ordinated packages of care that draw on the full range of appropriate services available (DoH 1999a; DoH 2000). Supervision in some form is seen as a key part of all professional practice to provide support to practitioners, enhance ongoing learning, and, to a greater or lesser degree, offer some protection to the public (Brown & Bourne 1996, UKCC 1996). Clinical supervision has gained increasing momentum within the nursing profession, but to a large extent this has been within a uni-professional framework , nurses supervising other nurses. This paper seeks to explore the ways in which multiprofessional working and clinical supervision interlink, and whether supervision across professional boundaries might be desirable, possible, and/or justifiable. Whilst our own view is that multiprofessional supervision is both possible and desirable, we seek to open up a debate, from our perspective as mental health nurses, about some of the issues related to the concept. Our motivation to explore this topic area emanates from our experiences as supervisors to colleagues within multiprofessional teams, as well as the experiences of those attending supervisor training courses. Following a brief overview of the development of clinical supervision in mental health care and recent policy guidelines, some models of clinical supervision are reviewed in terms of their suitability and applicability for multiprofessional working. [source]


    CBT for violent men with antisocial personality disorder.

    PERSONALITY AND MENTAL HEALTH, Issue 2 2010
    Reflections on the experience of carrying out therapy in MASCOT, a pilot randomized controlled trial
    Cognitive therapy for personality disorders (CBTpd) has been developed and assessed in borderline and antisocial personality disorders (ASPD) using a variety of research methodologies from single cases to randomized controlled trials. An exploratory randomized controlled trial of CBTpd compared with the usual treatment for men with ASPD in the community allowed insights into how to carry out therapy with this group of patients who are traditionally thought of as being difficult to manage. CBTpd for ASPD is time-limited, is problem-focused and aims to develop new ways of thinking and behaving that would reduce anger and acts of violence and improve interpersonal relationships. Men with ASPD often held beliefs that could interfere with the development of a therapeutic relationship. The beliefs were hypothesized to have arisen from experiences of being humiliated in childhood and adolescence as well as having experienced neglect and abuse. Equally, therapists needed to be aware that in developing a compassionate formulation of the patient's problems, they should not minimize the potential for violence. Supervision of both process and content had a greater importance than in other CBT models, and supervision required recordings of clinical sessions to enable this to happen. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    "Qualitative" Bankenaufsicht ,"Königsweg" der Regulierung?

    PERSPEKTIVEN DER WIRTSCHAFTSPOLITIK, Issue 3 2000
    Stephan Paul
    Banking regulation in the twenty-first century is at the crossroads. The article discusses the question whether the supervisory review of bank risk management systems is superior to the minimum capital requirements in traditional style. It points out the serious problems of both ways , especially the first one, which was preferred by the Basle Committee of Banking Supervision in its proposal "A new capital adequacy framework" (June 1999). [source]


    Modelling Operational Losses: A Bayesian Approach

    QUALITY AND RELIABILITY ENGINEERING INTERNATIONAL, Issue 5 2004
    Paolo Giudici
    Abstract The exposure of banks to operational risk has increased in recent years. The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (known as Basel II) has established a capital charge to cover operational risks other than credit and market risk. According to the advanced methods defined in ,The New Basel Capital Accord' to quantify the capital charge, in this paper we present an advanced measurement approach based on a Bayesian network model that estimates an internal measure of risk of the bank. One of the main problems faced when measuring the operational risk is the scarcity of loss data. The methodology proposed solves this critical point because it allows a coherent integration, via Bayes' theorem, of different sources of information, such as internal and external data, and the opinions of ,experts' (process owners) about the frequency and the severity of each loss event. Furthermore, the model corrects the losses distribution by considering the eventual relations between different nodes of the network that represent the losses of each combination of business line/event type/bank/process and the effectiveness of the corresponding internal and external controls. The operational risk capital charge is quantified by multiplying the value at risk (VaR) per event, a percentile of the losses distribution determined, by an estimate of the number of losses that may occur in a given period. Furthermore, it becomes possible to monitor the effectiveness of the internal and external system controls in place at the bank. The methodology we present has been experimented as a pilot project in one of the most important Italian banking groups, Monte dei Paschi di Siena. Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    Prudential Supervision: What Works and What Doesn't

    THE ECONOMIC JOURNAL, Issue 483 2002
    Charles Goodhart
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    On Supervision , Psychoanalytic and Jungian Perspectives edited by Petts, Ann & Shapley, Bernard

    THE JOURNAL OF ANALYTICAL PSYCHOLOGY, Issue 1 2009
    Susanna Wright
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Supervision of trainee anaesthetists: a survey of opinions and practices

    ANAESTHESIA, Issue 1 2002
    J. Kerr
    This questionnaire survey investigated the different degrees of supervision of trainee anaesthetic senior house officers (SHOs) in hospitals across the United Kingdom, and compared it with past practices as well as with The Royal College of Anaesthetists' recommendations at that time. It is apparent that the duration of intensive supervision of new anaesthetic trainees has increased over the last 25 years. This study assesses these changes in order to evaluate whether or not these reforms have achieved their intended outcomes. [source]


    Abusive Supervision in Advising Relationships: Investigating the Role of Social Support

    APPLIED PSYCHOLOGY, Issue 2 2009
    Elizabeth V. Hobman
    The present study examines the consequences of abusive supervision in an educational setting. The study contrasts the cross-domain stress-buffering hypothesis with the within-domain stress exacerbation hypothesis in examining the moderating role of advisor and team member support on the relationship between abusive supervision and student outcomes in student,advisor relationships. Using a temporal research design, results provided support for both hypotheses. In support of the stress exacerbation hypothesis, in the presence of high advisor support, there was a significant positive relationship between abusive supervision and anxiety, and a significant negative association between abusive supervision and psychological well-being. Consistent with the stress-buffering hypothesis, in the presence of high team member support, there was a negligible association between abusive supervision and satisfaction and anxiety. [source]


    Managing sexually abused and/or abusing children in substitute care

    CHILD & FAMILY SOCIAL WORK, Issue 2 2003
    Elaine Farmer
    ABSTRACT This paper reports on research on the characteristics, management and therapeutic treatment of sexually abused and/or abusing children in substitute care. Of the 40 sexually abused and/or abusing young people aged 10 or over in the interview sample, two-thirds showed sexual behaviours in the placement studied but one-third did not. The range of sexual behaviours shown by the young people is described. Analysis of the findings shows that four key components of effective management are supervision, adequate sex education, modification of inappropriate sexual behaviour and therapeutic attention to the needs that underlie such behaviour. Supervision includes planning for safe care before placement, preparing other children in the setting, teaching young people how to keep themselves safe when out on their own, and careful monitoring of contact with birth family members. The need for a proactive approach to sex education is stressed. Effective management approaches to masturbation, sexualized behaviour and sexually abusing behaviour are discussed but the processes of denial and minimization of sexual abuse and the development of high thresholds for action when looked after children are abused or at risk are shown to present obstacles to effective care. Finally, the importance of addressing children's deeper needs is emphasized, including the importance of regular review of their need for counselling. At the end of the article two case examples from the study are given. [source]


    Survey of the pre-school child health surveillance programme in Sweden

    ACTA PAEDIATRICA, Issue 2000
    R Kornfält
    A survey of the programme for developmental surveillance in the Child Health Centres (CHCs) in Sweden was performed using a questionnaire administered to the Chief Medical Officers (CMO) of the Child Health Services. The questionnaire asked about methods used for auditory examination, developmental surveillance and identification of disturbances in mother-child interaction. Activities for health promotion concerning breastfeeding, non-smoking and allergy prevention were also queried. Thirty-four CMOs representing 1731 CHCs and 645000 children answered the questionnaire. The reply rate was 81%. Various methods of auditory examination are offered all infants and children in Sweden. The national guidelines for health supervision are followed fairly closely by all. Screening for disturbances in attention, motor development and perception (DAMP) is performed by all but four districts, with various methods, resources and degrees of co-operation with school health services. Support in mother-child interaction is considered very important and new methods to identify and treat disturbances are gradually introduced. Breastfeeding is encouraged; breast milk is the main source of food for 67% of babies at 4 mo of age. Activities to stop or diminish use of tobacco are ongoing everywhere, as are programmes to identify children at risk of developing allergies and for allergy prevention. Thus, the Child Health Services maintain a high standard and are ambitious about introducing new methods and ideas. [source]


    FS09.1 Diacetylmorphine (heroin) allergy

    CONTACT DERMATITIS, Issue 3 2004
    Aliet J Hogen Esch
    Since heroin is delivered to a selected group of drug addicts under supervision of nurses in the Netherlands, we reported about several nurses who presented with work-related eczema and positive patch tests to heroin. To investigate the prevalence of heroin contact allergy among all workers in this heroin delivery project, a study was started using questionnaires. Altogether 31 nurses reported work-related complaints out of 100 who returned questionnaires. Besides reports of eczema, mainly of eyelids (probably airborne) and hands, there were mucosal and respiratory complaints. Patch tests were performed in 25 nurses with complaints; in 9 of them a heroin contact allergy could be confirmed. In 6 out of these 9 nurses this was combined with mucosal or respiratory complaints. There were also 6 nurses with mucosal or respiratory complaints without a contact allergy. Contact dermatitis from opioids, such as morphine and codeine, has been documented among opioid industry workers, nurses, doctors, pharmacists, and in patients. In conclusion heroin appears to be a potent contact allergen, causing contact dermatitis. Mucosal and respiratory complaints however, cannot be explained by this contact allergy; they might be caused by a type-1-allergy to heroin, or by a direct histamine liberating effect. Opioids are known histamine liberators causing urticaria, rhinitis and anaphylactoid reactions; therefore intracutaneous tests with heroin are unreliable. In an ongoing research project it will be attempted to detect specific IgE to heroin in the 12 workers with mucosal or respiratory complaints; within the next few months results will be available. [source]


    The probabilities of sex offender re-arrest

    CRIMINAL BEHAVIOUR AND MENTAL HEALTH, Issue 2 2003
    Roderic Broadhurst Associate Professor
    Background Estimates of the probabilities of re-arrest for sex offenders apprehended in Western Australia between April 1984 and December 1994 are reported. Population and method Of the 116,151 distinct male persons arrested for the first time from 1984,94, 2785 were identified with at least one sex offence. Subjects on average were followed up for 5.7 years and assessed by criminal record, Aboriginality, bail status, age, occupation and penal intervention. Three criteria, rearrest for any, repeat sex or a violent offence are used to summarize the ,careers' of sex offenders. Results Overall ultimate probabilities of rearrest for any offence were 0.61, for a repeat sex offence 0.33 and for a violent offence 0.51. Probabilities of re-arrest for non-Aboriginal offenders were lower for all definitions. Younger offenders, Aborigines and those with prior arrest for non-sex offences had higher probabilities for any or violent rearrest but older offenders tended to have higher probabilities of repeat sex offending. Community supervision and imprisonment significantly reduced the ,rate' or speed of re-arrest. Discussion Actuarial risk assessments for low-probability high-consequence events such as dangerous recidivism are useful for identifying groups with a high probability of rearrest, assisting management of these groups and evaluating penal interventions. Copyright © 2003 Whurr Publishers Ltd. [source]


    Are within-individual causes of delinquency the same as between-individual causes?

    CRIMINAL BEHAVIOUR AND MENTAL HEALTH, Issue 1 2002
    David P. Farrington PhD
    Background Previous studies of the causes of delinquency have been based on between-individual correlations. This paper aims to study the causes of delinquency by comparing within-individual and between-individual correlations of risk factors with delinquency. Method A total of 506 boys in the oldest sample of the Pittsburgh Youth Study were followed up in seven data waves between ages 13.8 and 17.8 on average. Results Poor parental supervision, low parental reinforcement and low involvement of the boy in family activities were the most important causes of delinquency according to forward-lagged within-individual correlations. Poor housing was positively related to delinquency for boys living in bad neighbourhoods but not for boys living in good neighbourhoods. Conclusions Forward-lagged within-individual correlations provide more valid information about the causes of delinquency than do between-individual correlations. Peer delinquency was the strongest correlate of delinquency according to between-individual correlations but was not a cause of delinquency according to forward-lagged within-individual correlations. Copyright © 2002 Whurr Publishers Ltd. [source]


    Risk factors for adult male criminality in Colombia

    CRIMINAL BEHAVIOUR AND MENTAL HEALTH, Issue 2 2001
    Joanne Klevens
    Objectives This study sought to establish, in Colombia, the importance of factors alleged to be causes or correlates of adult criminality according to the published literature from other countries. Methods A comparison was made of arrested male offenders from ages 18 to 30 (n = 223) and similar community controls (n = 222) selected from five cities in Colombia as to their family background, exposure to abuse, family stressors, perceived care and history of childhood disruptive behaviour problems. Results Compared with neighbourhood controls from similar social classes, offenders were significantly more likely to report having had parents with less education, a mother under the age of 18 or over the age of 35 at time of birth, family members involved in crime, experiencing extreme economic deprivation, parental absence, family conflict, severe punishments, physical abuse, and maternal unavailability, rejection and lack of supervision. Prevalence of childhood disruptive behaviour problems was similar among offenders and controls. These findings appear to be independent of economic status, family size or type, birth order, or primary caregiver. Although the independent contribution of most of these factors is small, once all others have been controlled for, their cumulative effect is strong. Conclusions The findings obtained in this Latin American setting do not support the generalized view that adult antisocial behaviour is necessarily preceded by a history of childhood behaviour problems. However, they do add evidence for the importance of family factors in the risk for adult criminality. Copyright © 2001 Whurr Publishers Ltd. [source]


    USING RANDOM JUDGE ASSIGNMENTS TO ESTIMATE THE EFFECTS OF INCARCERATION AND PROBATION ON RECIDIVISM AMONG DRUG OFFENDERS,

    CRIMINOLOGY, Issue 2 2010
    DONALD P. GREEN
    Most prior studies of recidivism have used observational data to estimate the causal effect of imprisonment or probation on the probability that a convicted individual is rearrested after release. Few studies have taken advantage of the fact that, in some jurisdictions, defendants are assigned randomly to judges who vary in sentencing tendencies. This study investigates whether defendants who are assigned randomly to more punitive judges have different recidivism probabilities than defendants who are assigned to relatively lenient judges. We track 1,003 defendants charged with drug-related offenses who were assigned randomly to nine judicial calendars between June 1, 2002 and May 9, 2003. Judges on these calendars meted out sentences that varied substantially in terms of prison and probation time. We tracked defendants using court records across a 4-year period after the disposition of their cases to determine whether they subsequently were rearrested. Our results indicate that randomly assigned variations in prison and probation time have no detectable effect on rates of rearrest. The findings suggest that, at least among those facing drug-related charges, incarceration and supervision seem not to deter subsequent criminal behavior. [source]


    MAKING DELINQUENT FRIENDS: ADULT SUPERVISION AND CHILDREN'S AFFILIATIONS,

    CRIMINOLOGY, Issue 1 2005
    MARK WARR
    Although having delinquent friends is one of the strongest known correlates of delinquent behavior, criminologists have been curiously silent as to why some adolescents acquire delinquent friends and others do not. Analysis of data from the national Survey of Parents and Children reveals a strong association between forms of direct and indirect parental supervision and the kinds of friends that adolescents make. Parents who closely monitor their children's affiliations exhibit a variety of traits typical of involved or conscientious parents. Indirect supervision also appears to mediate the effect of attachment to parents, one of the few established correlates of delinquent friendships. These and other findings illustrate the critical role that parent-child relations play in the process of making delinquent friends. [source]


    Walls of secrecy and silence

    CRIMINOLOGY AND PUBLIC POLICY, Issue 3 2010
    The Madoff case, cartels in the construction industry
    Research Summary Most analysts of the causes of the contemporary credit crunch have concluded that the supervising agencies failed in their duties. The same is true for studies of several major fraud scandals, including the Madoff affair and the Dutch construction fraud. The remedy seems immediately obvious: more and better regulation and supervision. However, this line of reasoning seems somewhat simplistic by ignoring the question of how illegal activities can remain hidden for many years from supervising agencies, victims, and bystanders. This research article argues that the problem also lies in the successful concealment of illegal activities by the perpetrators and in the presence of silence in their social environment. Policy Implications The cases analyzed in this article suggest that financial misconduct also could be controlled by breaking the conspiracies of silence. The strengthening of supervision is unlikely to be effective without simultaneous efforts to encourage people to speak out and to give them incentives to want to know and to tell the truth. [source]


    The impact of after-school programs on the routine activities of middle-school students: Results from a randomized, controlled trial,

    CRIMINOLOGY AND PUBLIC POLICY, Issue 2 2009
    Amanda Brown Cross
    Research Summary Unsupervised after-school time for adolescents is a concern for parents and policymakers alike. Evidence linking unsupervised adolescent socializing to problem behavior outcomes heightens this concern among criminologists. Routine activities theory suggests that, when youth peer groups congregate away from adult authority, both opportunity for and motivation to engage in deviant acts increase. After-school programs are a possible solution to unsupervised teen socializing during afternoon hours and are much in demand. However, empirical research has yet to test the relationship between the availability of after-school programs and youth routine activities. This study presents evidence from a multisite, randomized, controlled trial of an after-school program for middle-school students in an urban school district. Policy Implications Youth in the treatment group engaged in less unsupervised socializing after school than youth in the control group but not as much less as would be expected if the after-school program was providing consistent supervision to youth who would otherwise be unsupervised. Additional analyses examined why the influence of the after-school program was not more pronounced. We found that, although program attendance was related to decreases in unsupervised socializing, the program did not attract many delinquency-prone youths who were unsupervised, which suggests that the students most in need of the program did not benefit. Furthermore, data obtained from a mid-year activity survey revealed that youth in the study were highly engaged in a variety of after-school activities. The addition of the after-school program into the mixture of available activities had little effect on the frequency with which students participated in organized activities after school. [source]