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2 - The Aims and Method of the Study

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 October 2009

Jerzy Sarnecki
Affiliation:
Stockholms Universitet
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Summary

The aims of the study

In the previous chapter, I have attempted to show that the network perspective is closely tied to criminological theory, even if it is seldom used in empirical criminological studies. What is interesting is that the network approach, in a methodological sense at least, is compatible with a number of different and often conflicting perspectives within criminological theory. The conclusion reached at the end of my (necessarily brief) discussion is that a study of juvenile offending in a metropolitan area which employs network methods may well contribute with new insights into this form of criminality. The network analyses employed in this study build primarily on the concept of co-offending.

The intention here is to use network methodology to examine the structure of co-offending and the formation of juvenile crime networks in a metropolitan area. The hope is that our understanding of juvenile crime will be improved when we examine not only the criminally active individuals themselves but also the relationships that exist among them.

In this context there is no reason to hide the fact that the organisation of the study is in large part governed by the possibilities and limitations associated with the need to gain access to relevant data.

Issues to be examined

The study will look at the following specific questions:

  1. What do the co-offending networks formed by youths in Stockholm look like? (A central network as was the case in Borlänge? A number of central groups? A more splintered structure?)

  2. How stable are relations between co-offenders and how durable are the delinquent networks?

  3. […]

Type
Chapter
Information
Delinquent Networks
Youth Co-Offending in Stockholm
, pp. 29 - 36
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2001

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