Implementing social policy through the criminal justice system: youth, prisons, and community-oriented policing in Nicaragua

Authors
Publication date 2018
Journal Oxford Development Studies
Volume | Issue number 46 | 1
Pages (from-to) 57-70
Number of pages 13
Organisations
  • Faculty of Humanities (FGw) - Centre for Latin American Research and Documentation (CEDLA)
Abstract
Nicaragua has implemented a community-oriented policing model in addition to providing a prison system that is based on the premise of prisoners’ re-education. Though these are part of the criminal justice system, they are also presented as social policies with the objective of social (re)insertion of marginalised urban youth particularly. On the premise that detention is temporary and beneficial, these policies claim to prevent (youth) criminality and to reform its perpetrators. Yet they mostly push these youths into a spiral of continued state interventions. Through an analysis of youth-oriented public policy and an examination of the expansion of criminal justice services, complemented by ethnographic research material collected with young (former) prisoners, this article demonstrates how and why social policy for youth is being carried out by the criminal justice system. This development is underpinned by the securitisation of social policy and a political culture of social conservatism that renders marginalised youth unworthy of social protection.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1080/13600818.2017.1391192
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