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9780231124102

Runaways

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780231124102

  • ISBN10:

    0231124104

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2006-07-30
  • Publisher: Columbia Univ Pr

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Summary

During the 1960s and 1970s, runaways became a source of national concern in America. Countercultural activists provided support to runaway youth, and private agencies began developing innovative, sometimes controversial programs to serve them. In this multilayered history, Karen M. Staller examines the programs and policies that took shape during this period and the ways in which the ideas of the alternative-services movement continue to guide our responses to at-risk youth.Staller begins with the 1960s, when the mainstream media began to characterize the act of running away less as an opportunity for exciting adventure (as experienced by Huckleberry Finn) and more as a temptation with dangerous consequences. She then turns to the books, poems, broadsides, and songs produced by Beat writers and countercultural meccas like Haight Ashbury and New York City's East Village, which embraced runaways as kindred social revolutionaries. Adopting the ideology of the Beats, groups like the San Francisco-based Diggers established informal services utilized by runaway adolescents, including crash pads and helplines. Many of their ideas took root, and alternative providers began to bridge the gap between counterculture and mainstream institutions.Staller concludes with an analysis of how the legislative desire to decriminalize running away, coupled with the judicial system's growing discomfort with policing the moral and civic education of youths, led to an increase in the number of troubled children appearing on the streets. It also prompted the enactment of federal runaway youth legislation, including the Runaway Youth Act of 1974, which endorsed the alternative-service community's model.By looking at the history of runaways, Staller illuminates how the mainstream media and countercultural ideologies shaped the identity and perception of this social problem and how developments in service and social policy continue to evolve today.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments xi
Foreword: A Personal Journey to Some Research Questions xv
1 Testing Freedom: On the Road to a Runaway Problem 1(26)
PART 1 Constructing Runaway Youth 27(44)
2 Media Myth Spinning: From Runaway Adventurers to Street Survivors (1960-1978)
29(22)
3 Spinning Myths from Runaway Lives: A Hip Beat Version of Dropping Out
51(20)
PART 2 Psychedelic Social Workers and Alternative Services 71(52)
4 Digger Free: Power in Autonomy, Independence in a Free City Network (1966-1968)
73(24)
5 The Grassroots Rise of Alternative Runaway Services (1967-1974)
97(26)
PART 3 Policy and "Runaway" Youth 123(50)
6 Shifting Institutional Structures: From Moral Guidance to Autonomous Denizens (1960-1978)
125(25)
7 Legitimization Through Legislation—The Runaway Youth Act: National Attention to the Runaway Problem (1971-1974)
150(23)
PART 4 Conclusions: Where We've Been, Where We're Going, What We've Learned 173(28)
8 National Extensions—Problem, Services, and Policy (1974—)
175(19)
9 Closing Note: Lessons Learned and Conveyed
194(7)
Appendix 1 Runaway Youth Act (Senate Version, S. 2829: the Bayh/Cook Bill) 201(6)
Appendix 2 Runaway Youth Act (House Version, H. 9298) 207(6)
Appendix 3 The Runaway Youth Act of 1974 (P.P. 93-415) 213(6)
Notes 219(54)
Selected Bibliography 273(6)
Index 279

Supplemental Materials

What is included with this book?

The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

The Used, Rental and eBook copies of this book are not guaranteed to include any supplemental materials. Typically, only the book itself is included. This is true even if the title states it includes any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

Excerpts

Read an excerpt from Chapter 1: "Testing Freedom: On the Road to a Runaway Problem" (pdf)

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