Perspectives on Hypercriminalization and Its Impact on Racially Minoritized Youth: Insights from Juvenile and Human Services Practitioners

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.52935/25.2514.9

Keywords:

Race, Social Control, Punishment, Juvenile Justice, Youth

Abstract

The criminalization of racially minoritized youth is often examined in the literature on racial and ethnic disparities (RED) and the school-to-prison pipeline. Most of the research in this area focuses on the impact of formalized criminalization on the offending trajectories of racially minoritized youth, often overlooking informal experiences with criminalization and their influence on how these youth construct their self-perceptions. The current study assesses human and juvenile justice service providers’ perceptions of the impact of repeated criminalization on racially minoritized youths’ self-concept and other outcomes. The results of thematic coding showed that practitioners perceived that the ubiquitous experience of regular criminalization altered racially minoritized youths’ self-concept and contributed to other problems, including compounded criminalization, and the development of internalizing and at-risk behaviors. The results suggest that the criminalization process extends beyond juvenile justice processing and access to conventional opportunities.

Author Biographies

  • Darren Beneby, University of North Carolina at Greensboro

    Darren R. Beneby, Ph.D., is an assistant professor in the Department of Sociology, Criminology, and Justice Studies at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, Greensboro, North Carolina. Dr. Beneby's current research examines community corrections, criminological theory, community violence exposure and health disparities, and the punitive social control of minority youth with special attention to the interlinkage of racialized criminalization across social institutions.

  • Jonathan Glenn, North Carolina Central University

    Jonathan W. Glenn, Ph.D., serves as an adjunct instructor at North Carolina Central University, Durham, North Carolina. His research focuses on punitive excess, racial equity in the criminal justice system, and criminal justice system improvement. 

  • Tameka Williams, Justice System Partners

    Tameka V. Williams, Ph.D., is the Director of Staff Investment and Curiosity at Justice System Partners. She has over 18 years of work experience in the criminal and juvenile legal systems, project management, and higher education. Her research interests focus on student professional development, correctional managers’ leadership development, barbershops and beauty salons as community anchors, the criminalization of racially minoritized youth, and the barriers to leadership for Black women in the workplace.

  • Kenethia McIntosh Fuller, University of North Carolina at Pembroke

    Kenethia L. McIntosh Fuller, Ph.D., is an assistant professor in the Department of Sociology and Criminal Justice at the University of North Carolina Pembroke, Pembroke, North Carolina. Her research focuses on the influence of race and ethnicity in perspectives and treatment in the justice system, as well as criminal justice education. 

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Published

09/15/2025

How to Cite

Perspectives on Hypercriminalization and Its Impact on Racially Minoritized Youth: Insights from Juvenile and Human Services Practitioners . (2025). Journal of Applied Juvenile Justice Services, 39(1), 68-81. https://doi.org/10.52935/25.2514.9

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