Doing time, filling time: Bureaucratic ritualism as a systemic barrier to youth reentry
This paper contributes to knowledge about the challenges of youth reentry by examining how transitional services can function as a barrier to – instead of a support for – healthy reintegration of youth. Using participant observation conducted in 2003–2004 at a juvenile aftercare program in Philadelphia, we explore a pervasive problem that Merton (1940) termed “bureaucratic ritualism.” Case workers and administrators became beholden to daily demands related to billing, paperwork, and meeting minimum standards, supplanting the larger goal of individualized care for young people returning from placements. Outputs, not outcomes, became the measure of success. We identify a number of reintegration activities that were ritualistic in nature and explore the features of the system that encouraged ritualistic responses by aftercare workers. Finally, we identify a group of aftercare workers, which we call “proactive caregivers” who resisted the organizational pressures to become bureaucratic ritualists.
Year of publication: |
2013
|
---|---|
Authors: | Fader, Jamie J. ; Dum, Christopher P. |
Published in: |
Children and Youth Services Review. - Elsevier, ISSN 0190-7409. - Vol. 35.2013, 5, p. 899-907
|
Publisher: |
Elsevier |
Subject: | Youth reentry | Juvenile justice | Juvenile aftercare | Reintegration | Community corrections |
Saved in:
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