When Juvenile Delinquency Became an International Post-War Concern
The United Nations, the Council of Europe and the Place of Greece
Author(s)
Avdela, Efi
Collection
Knowledge Unlatched (KU)Number
103653Language
EnglishAbstract
This book examines how the intensive discussions about the issue of juvenile delinquency in the new international organizations (United Nations, World Health Organization, Council of Europe), which emerged after the end of the Second World War, internationalized the anxieties generated in the fifties and sixties by its purported increase in Europe and beyond. Greece, a regular member-state, anxious to ensure international legitimacy in the aftermath of the Civil War, presented abroad an embellished picture of the measures undertaken at home for the prevention and containment of juvenile delinquency, sidestepping the strong moralism and the juridical formalism that dominated both official and unofficial approaches.
Keywords
Political Science; UNO, Juvenile Delinquency, Council of Europe, WHO, Post-war Period, GreeceDOI
10.14220/ghleISBN
9783737009416OCN
1082959258Publication date and place
Göttingen, 2018Imprint
V&R unipressClassification
Military history: post-WW2 conflicts
Modern warfare