8 resultados para Juvenile Delinquency
em Consorci de Serveis Universitaris de Catalunya (CSUC), Spain
Marginación e inadaptación: notas para un estudio sobre la llamada delincuencia juvenil en Barcelona
Resumo:
Conversa transcrita de l'autora de l'article amb dos nois i una noia.
Resumo:
Su título, Neds, muestra el hundimiento en el fango de la violencia de John McGill, en un arrabal del Glasgow, capital de Escocia, de los años setenta. Ned es un término aplicado a ciertas personas en Escocia y responde a las siglas de «no educados y delincuentes». La visión estereotipada de un ned es un adolescente varón (aunque este término no excluye a las mujeres), blanco, que lleva ropa de marca, joyas de oro y participa en actos vandálicos vinculados con la pequeña delincuencia; los neds tienen un comportamiento grosero, generan constantes peleas, abusan del consumo de alcohol y del tabaco, etc. En resumen, se caracterizan por su comportamiento antisocial.
Resumo:
L'article té per objectiu explorar quins factors esdevenen rellevants per al cessament de la conducta delictiva en menors i joves infractors,relacionant dos conceptes que malgrat que provenen d'àmbits disciplinaris diferents, el desistiment i la resiliència, tenen força elements en comú. En l'estudi participen un total de 110 joves de la província de Barcelona entre 14 i 17 anys que es troben pendent d'inici, en execució o han finalitzat un programa socioeducatiu (mediació, medi obert o internament) en l'àmbit de la justícia juvenil. S'utilitza un qüestionari i una fitxa per recollir informació de les bases de dades del Departament de Justícia de la Generalitat de Catalunya. Els principals resultats indiquen que un passat advers no dificulta el desistiment, i que l'acció de factors de protecció contextuals i individuals fa minvar el risc de reincidència.
Resumo:
Gammarus aequicauda is a euryhaline amphipod that is a common inhabitant of brackish environments of theMediterranean Sea. In the Ebro delta, the population density of G. aequicauda is highly variable throughout the year. The main objective of this study is to investigate the effect of salinity on the growth of G. aequicauda juveniles. G. aequicauda embryos and juveniles can survive and grow in the laboratory between 2 psu and 40 psu salinity, depending on the previous acclimation period for the reproductive individuals. Adults acclimated at 34 psu produced embryos and juveniles that survived and developed at salinities between 9 psu and 40 psu; adults acclimated at 9 psu produced embryos and juveniles that could develop in oligohaline conditions. The lower growth rate values were 10.9 μmd−1 and 13.5 μmd−1 at 40 psu and 2 psu, respectively, with the higher values of 18.0 μmd−1 and 18.5 μmd−1 at 19 and 34 psu, respectively.
Resumo:
We experimentally examined the predator-prey relationships between juvenile spotted sorubim Pseudoplastystoma corruscans and young-of-the-year invasive and native fish species of the Paraná River basin, Brazil. Three invasive (peacock bass Cichla piquiti, Nile tilapia Oreochromis niloticus, and channel catfish Ictalurus punctatus) and two native (yellowtail tetra Astyanax altiparanae and streaked prochilod Prochilodus lineatus) fish species were offered as prey to P. corruscans in 300 L aquaria with three habitat complexity treatments (0%, 50% and 100% structure-covered). Prey survival was variable through time and among species (C. piquiti < O. niloticus < A. altiparanae < P. lineatus < I. punctatus), depending largely on species-specific prey behavior but also on prey size and morphological defenses. Habitat complexity did not directly affect P. corruscans piscivory but some prey species changed their microhabitat use and shoaling behavior among habitat treatments in predator’s presence. Pseudoplatystoma corruscans preyed preferentially on smaller individuals of those invasive species with weak morphological defensive features that persisted in a non-shoaling behavior. Overall, our results contrast with those in a companion experiment using a diurnal predator, suggesting that nocturnal piscivores preferentially prey on different (rather diurnal) fish species and are less affected by habitat complexity. Our findings suggest that recovering the native populations of P. corruscans might help controling some fish species introduced to the Paraná River basin, particularly C. piquiti and O. niloticus, whose parental care is expected to be weak or null at night