U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government, Department of Justice.

NCJRS Virtual Library

The Virtual Library houses over 235,000 criminal justice resources, including all known OJP works.
Click here to search the NCJRS Virtual Library

Juvenile Delinquency in Hong Kong (From Juvenile Justice Systems: International Perspectives, P 113-137, 1997, John A Winterdyk, ed. - See NCJ-174323)

NCJ Number
174328
Author(s)
H Traver
Date Published
1997
Length
25 pages
Annotation
Juvenile delinquency and juvenile justice in Hong Kong are described in terms of the cultural and historical factors that have shaped the country's concepts of juvenile delinquency, as well as the nature and extent of youth crime, the administration of juvenile justice, and current issues related to juvenile delinquency.
Abstract
Hong Kong is still predominantly a Chinese society, but it can hardly be characterized as a traditional Confucian society in which filial piety is the central factor in the maintenance of a stable hierarchical social order. Industrialization and urbanization since World War II has meant a rapid decline in informal family-based systems of control, although filial piety continues to have a strong influence in Hong Kong society. Hong Kong's juvenile justice system emerged fully developed in 1932 when the Juvenile Offenders Ordinance established juvenile courts and probation officers to deal with juvenile offenders. Rapid economic development and the lack of an underclass has meant that crime has not been made a political issue. Instead, crime is usually seen as being committed by deviant individuals. A corporatist model of juvenile justice has remained in place since the system was established. Youth have declined as a proportion of the population; juvenile delinquency has increased but is probably far less serious than widely believed. Crime reporting has increased; in addition, most delinquency involves relatively minor offenses. The resumption of Chinese sovereignty over Hong Kong in July 1997 should not produce any significant changes in juvenile justice in Hong Kong. Figures, table, and 41 references