A/RES/50/81
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system, quite apart from the wasted lives and personal tragedies which result
from drug dependence and criminal behaviour.
G.
Juvenile delinquency
86. Juvenile crime and delinquency are serious problems all over the world.
Their intensity and gravity depend mostly on the social, economic and cultural
conditions in each country. There is evidence, however, of an apparent
world-wide increase in juvenile criminality combined with economic recession,
especially in marginal sectors of urban centres. In many cases, youth
offenders are "street children" who have been exposed to violence in their
immediate social environment, either as observers or as victims. Their basic
education, when they have it, is poor; their primary socialization from the
family is too often inadequate; and their socio-economic environment is shaped
by poverty and destitution. Rather than relying solely on the criminal
justice system, approaches to the prevention of violence and crime should thus
include measures to support equality and justice, to combat poverty and to
reduce hopelessness among young people.
Proposals for action
1.
Priority to preventive measures
87. Governments should give priority to issues and problems of juvenile
delinquency and youth criminality, with particular attention to preventive
policies and programmes. Rural areas should be provided with adequate socioeconomic opportunities and administrative services which could discourage
young people from migrating to urban areas. Youth from poor urban settings
should have access to specific educational, employment and leisure programmes,
particularly during long school holidays. Young people who drop out of school
or come from broken families should benefit from specific social programmes
that help them build self-esteem and confidence conducive to responsible
adulthood.
2.
Prevention of violence
88. Governments and other relevant organizations, particularly youth
organizations, should consider organizing information campaigns and
educational and training programmes in order to sensitize youth to the
personally and socially detrimental effects of violence in the family,
community and society, to teach them how to communicate without violence and
to promote training so that they can protect themselves and others against
violence. Governments should also develop programmes to promote tolerance and
better understanding among youth, with a view to eradicating contemporary
forms of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance and
thereby prevent violence.
89. To prevent violence and crime, the development of social organization,
particularly through youth organizations and community involvement, should be
fostered by a supportive social policy and within a legal framework.
Government assistance should focus on facilitating the ability of community
and youth organizations to express and evaluate their needs concerning the
prevention of violence and crime, to formulate and implement actions for
themselves and to cooperate with each other.
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