Health Problems
is another causative influence to juvenile delinquency as obtaining sufficient health care is another considerable matter for American youth. Things like proper nutrition and mental health are major contributing factors.
A third factor is family problems. Children are being polarized into two distinct economic groups: those in affluent, two-earner, married-couple households, and those in poor, single-parent households. Kids whose parents’ divorce may increase their involvement in delinquency, especially if they have a close bond with the parent who is forced to leave.
Substandard Living Conditions Many children live in substandard housing—such as high-rise, multiple-family dwellings, which can have a negative influence on their long-term psychological health. Adolescents living in deteriorated urban areas are prevented from having productive and happy lives.
Inadequate Education is the last factor contributing to delinquency. More than 10 percent of minority youths never finish high school. Poor minority-group children attend underfunded schools, obtain insufficient educational opportunities resulting fewer opportunities to accomplish achievement thus resulting in delinquent acts and risky, destructive behavior.