2019
DOI: 10.1007/s10612-019-09466-4
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Troubled Affluent Youth’s Experiences in a Therapeutic Boarding School: The Elite Arm of the Youth Control Complex and Its Implications for Youth Justice

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Cited by 11 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…There are more concerns which may need to be addressed when it comes to AT practice specifically. For example, WT and residential treatment for adolescents in the United States is typically an involuntary practice which comes at a high cost to families (Mooney & Leighton, 2019). Gass et al (2019) reported adolescents remaining in OBH for an average of 90 days at a cost of US$561 per day.…”
Section: Discussion and Implementationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There are more concerns which may need to be addressed when it comes to AT practice specifically. For example, WT and residential treatment for adolescents in the United States is typically an involuntary practice which comes at a high cost to families (Mooney & Leighton, 2019). Gass et al (2019) reported adolescents remaining in OBH for an average of 90 days at a cost of US$561 per day.…”
Section: Discussion and Implementationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, Chatfield et al's (2021) research failed to find any association between forcible transport and youths' perceived quality of experience in residential care. IYT has also been criticized as a form of social control or "strong-arm rehabilitation" that can elicit traumatic responses (Mooney & Leighton, 2019;Rosen, 2021). Robbins (2014) and Szalavitz (2006) described such practices as being fraught with contention and coercion which pose a greater risk of harm than benefit to adolescents.…”
Section: Scenario #2mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Potential benefits of IYT include: reducing safety risks during transport and increasing access to needed treatment for acute youth (Persi et al, 2016). Conversely, potential consequences of IYT include: the violation of human rights and self determination (American Bar Association, 2007;Persi et al, 2016), overuse of IYT for non-acute youth (Persi et al, 2016), and re-traumatization (Mooney & Leighton, 2019;Rosen, 2021).…”
Section: Five-step Ethical Frameworkmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Although seldom studied, its workings have important implications for understanding the current terrain of youth social control, and how privatization can create new sites for punishment. Not only do middle-class teens engage in delinquency at similar rates to less privileged young people, these more fortunate youths also experience high rates of anxiety disorders, depression, substance abuse, suicide and somatic symptoms (Mooney and Leighton 2019). While teens from the lower classes become entangled in the justice system, the "unwanted" behaviors of middle-, upper-middle-and upper-class teens often land them in private facilities and institutions.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%